ASE Labs
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now. There are 965 people online (0 Friends).
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Forum
  • Register/Login

ThermalTake TR2-M4

Author
Nivram
Posted
October 6, 2003
Views
47377
Looking for a good HSF for that OEM CPU purchase or just a better than stock HSF for peace of mind. Read about one here.
Tags Cooling

Page 1: Background to Conclusion

<B>A Little Background</B>:
I have been working with electronics for over 30 years. Started by learning to operate and maintain high frequency radios in the military service. Because the components were a lot less integrated (yes, no vlsi) and 10kw power output requirement, these radios produced a lot of heat and therefore required extensive cooling. All types of cooling techniques were used: axial, ducted axial, and cage fans located within the equipment; externally mounted air conditioning and large ducted sump cooling systems.

Although not the size of those behemoths (think of restaurant size refrigerators), today's CPUs also produce a lot of heat for their size. What I find intriguing is the use of ducted and cage fans techniques for cooling from my introduction to electronics that are coming back into use today. What is vastly different of course is the small size when I compare them to my memory of those times.

Although unrelated to this review, I also remember these radios had windows (unetched of course). Not to look at the nice show from the neon and laser lites, but to notice dangerous component arcing or just exploding (luckily thick, reinforced glass).

<B>Introduction</B>:
Aron recently sent me a <a href="http://www.xoxide.com/thtramdp4co.html">ThermalTake TR2-M4 HSF </a> to test that he had received from <a href="http://www.Xoxide.com/">Xoxide</a>. It is, of course, based on cage fan technology mentioned above. I had only seen photos of this and other similiar HSFs, so I was pleasantly surprised by the overall, small size of the TR2-M4. Also, included in the package was a nice half page installation guide, it is true pictures are worth a thousand words.

<center>tr2m4</center>

<B>Specificatons</B>:
Below are screen clips from ThermalTake's website of the specifications and features for the TR2-M4. Of course, I like the use of a three prong heatsink mounting mechanism. This unit is set up to use a four prong power (almost 1/2 amp max draw) connector with a separate motherboard fan speed monitor. The fan speed control reostat is mounted on a card slot bracket for mounting in an unoccupied PCI slot. It would be easy to remove the reostat from the bracket and mount in on a front panel for easier fan speed control asi it has very long leads.

<center>hsfspecs features</center>

<B>Testing</B>:
The testing system is (no overclocking was attempted during this setup):

Shuttle Motherboard, Model# AK35S
AMD ATHLON XP 2200+ CPU
Kingston DDR RAM 256MB PC2700

<center>testsetup</center>

The testing scenerio was 1/2 hour to obtain idle temperture, then 1/2 hour of folding@home to stress the CPU to obtain the load temperature. Temperature and fan rpm readings were done using MBM5 taking high and low readings for temperatures and average readings for fan rpms.

I setup the tests using the stock AMD HSF with ceramique against the TR2 M4 using its stock thermal compound and ceramique. I then placed the results into a chart trying to make it easy to read and understand. The readings were corrected for ambient temperature variations, but were rerun if ambient changed more than one degree during testing periods.

<center>testtemps</center>

It was a pleasant surprise to see how well the ThermalTake thermal compound performed in competition with the ceramique. Also, I was wondering how the mechanical mounting of the copper plate to the the aluminum heat sink would work. Obviously ThermalTake did a good job in mating these two surfaces. I should note here that the thermal compound on the bottom of the TR2-M4 is not the standard thermal tape. I touched the edge of the compound (outside the contact area for the AMD CPU, so no foul here) with the tip of my finger and made a smudge, which I could never do with standard thermal tape.

<center>copperplate</center>

I did notice that the specifications called for a 2100-4500 rpm fan speed, but I registered readings of 2450 to 4750. You could attribute these to the motherboard misreading the fan speeds. Correcting the reading for the 10% factor noted with the speed specification brings the fan readings almost to the stated specification.

<B>Conclusion</B>:
It was a pleasant surprise to see how well the ThermalTake thermal compound performed in competition with the ceramique. I was wondering how the mechanical mounting of the copper plate to the the aluminum heat sink would work, but obviously (as noted above) ThermalTake did a good job in mating these two surfaces. With its relatively small size and weighing in at only 397g, mounting this unit in any position and on most motherboards should not prove to be a problem. I want to thank <a href="http://www.Xoxide.com/">Xoxide</a> for providing this opportunity for a wonderful week of testing.


<center><img src="http://www.aselabs.com/images/awards/2.gif"></center>
 
Page 1
View As Single Page Print This Page Print Entire Article
Related Articles
  • Evercool Zodiac II Notebook Cooler
  • Cooler Master Storm SF-19 Strike Force Notebook Cooler
  • Evercool Royal NP-901 Notebook Cooler
  • Arctic Cooling ARCTIC NC Notebook Cooler
  • Thermaltake Mobile Fan 12

Title

Medium Image View Large
Login
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now.
Forgot your password?
Navigation
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Register/Login
  • Shopping
  • ASE Forums
  • Anime Threads
  • HardwareLogic
  • ASE Adnet
Latest News
  • Kingston HyperX Cloud 2 Pro Gaming Headset Unboxing
  • Synology DS415+ Unboxing
  • D-Link DCS-5020L Wireless IP Pan/Tilt IP Camera
  • Actiontec WiFi Powerline Network Extender Kit Unboxing
  • Durovis Dive Unboxing
  • Bass Egg Verb Unboxing
  • Welcome to the new server
  • Gmail Gets Optional Preview Pane
  • HBO Go on Consoles
  • HP Touchpad Update
Latest Articles
  • D-Link Exo AC2600 Smart Mesh Wi-Fi Router DIR-2660-US
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse
  • HyperX Cloud Alpha Pro Gaming Headset
  • Linksys Wemo Smart Home Suite
  • Fully Jarvis Adjustable Standing Desk
Latest Topics
  • Hello
  • Welcome to the new server at ASE Labs
  • Evercool Royal NP-901 Notebook Cooler at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys at ASE Labs
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones at ASE Labs
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard at ASE Labs
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera at ASE Labs
  • Kingston SDX10V/128GB SDXC Memory at ASE Labs
  • What are you listening to now?
  • Antec Six Hundred v2 Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Sans Digital TR5UTP 5-Bay RAID Tower at HardwareLogic
  • Crucial Ballistix Smart Tracer 6GB PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664ST1608OB at HardwareLogic
  • Cooler Master Storm Enforcer Mid-Tower Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Arctic M571-L Gaming Laser Mouse at ASE Labs
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse at ASE Labs
Press Release
  • Huntkey Has Launched Its New Power Strips with USB Chargers on Amazon US
  • Inspur Releases TensorFlow-Supported FPGA Compute Acceleration Engine TF2
  • Hot Pepper Introduces Spicy New Smartphones in US Markets
  • Sharp Introduces New Desktop Printers For The Advanced Office
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • Fujifilm launches "instax SQUARE SQ6 Taylor Swift Edition", designed by instax global partner Taylor Swift
  • Huawei nova 3 With Best-in-class AI Capabilities Goes on Sale Today
  • Rand McNally Introduces Its Most Advanced Dashboard Camera
  • =?UTF-8?Q?My_Size_to_Showcase_Its_MySizeId=E2=84=A2_Mobil?= =?UTF-8?Q?e_Measurement_Technology_at_CurvyCon_NYC?=
Home - ASE Publishing - About Us
© 2010 Aron Schatz (ASE Publishing) [Queries: 18 (8 Cached)] [Rows: 299 Fetched: 42] [Page Generation time: 1.6577119827271]