- Dec 13, 2004
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Originally posted by: elpres05
Those heat pipes serve more for marketing than actual performance gains. For a cooler of this size, the VF900 is not only smaller; it?s much lighter than the VF700. And ask me, going lighter isn?t a good option. You can learn much more about heat sinks and the physics involved HERE
After close inspections, this is what I think of the new VF900. I have a lot of bad views but it doesn?t change the outcome, the VF900 will perform better. See all the explanation..
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.
4. Overall cooling with increase overthe VF700 (funny, but its simple)
The VF900 has a greater surface exposure, a large number of fins all around means more air can particles can strike the surface carrying the heat away.
To sum up!
Great job by ZALMAN, they managed to reduce a full 100 g (that?s awesome) so now you don?t have to worry about your VGA falling off.
If you need more help HERE or simply join the forums.
Originally posted by: Crescent13
Hmm. Looks interesting. I wonder how much better it is than the VF-700Cu that I have. Would it be worth the upgrade? I'll see if I can find some reviews.
EDIT: Holy Crap 44 pounds!!!
Originally posted by: hemmy
Originally posted by: elpres05
Those heat pipes serve more for marketing than actual performance gains. For a cooler of this size, the VF900 is not only smaller; it?s much lighter than the VF700. And ask me, going lighter isn?t a good option. You can learn much more about heat sinks and the physics involved HERE
After close inspections, this is what I think of the new VF900. I have a lot of bad views but it doesn?t change the outcome, the VF900 will perform better. See all the explanation..
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.
4. Overall cooling with increase overthe VF700 (funny, but its simple)
The VF900 has a greater surface exposure, a large number of fins all around means more air can particles can strike the surface carrying the heat away.
To sum up!
Great job by ZALMAN, they managed to reduce a full 100 g (that?s awesome) so now you don?t have to worry about your VGA falling off.
If you need more help HERE or simply join the forums.
So when an XP-120 beats coolers twice its weight, you still think less weight is always bad?
Originally posted by: elpres05
Those heat pipes serve more for marketing than actual performance gains. For a cooler of this size, the VF900 is not only smaller; it?s much lighter than the VF700. And ask me, going lighter isn?t a good option. You can learn much more about heat sinks and the physics involved HERE
After close inspections, this is what I think of the new VF900. I have a lot of bad views but it doesn?t change the outcome, the VF900 will perform better. See all the explanation..
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.
4. Overall cooling with increase overthe VF700 (funny, but its simple)
The VF900 has a greater surface exposure, a large number of fins all around means more air can particles can strike the surface carrying the heat away.
To sum up!
Great job by ZALMAN, they managed to reduce a full 100 g (that?s awesome) so now you don?t have to worry about your VGA falling off.
If you need more help HERE or simply join the forums.
Originally posted by: lifeguard1999
Originally posted by: elpres05
Those heat pipes serve more for marketing than actual performance gains. For a cooler of this size, the VF900 is not only smaller; it?s much lighter than the VF700. And ask me, going lighter isn?t a good option. You can learn much more about heat sinks and the physics involved HERE
After close inspections, this is what I think of the new VF900. I have a lot of bad views but it doesn?t change the outcome, the VF900 will perform better. See all the explanation..
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.
4. Overall cooling with increase overthe VF700 (funny, but its simple)
The VF900 has a greater surface exposure, a large number of fins all around means more air can particles can strike the surface carrying the heat away.
To sum up!
Great job by ZALMAN, they managed to reduce a full 100 g (that?s awesome) so now you don?t have to worry about your VGA falling off.
If you need more help HERE or simply join the forums.
When you test it, let me know. Otherwise this is just educated guessing.
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
Originally posted by: lifeguard1999
Originally posted by: elpres05
Those heat pipes serve more for marketing than actual performance gains. For a cooler of this size, the VF900 is not only smaller; it?s much lighter than the VF700. And ask me, going lighter isn?t a good option. You can learn much more about heat sinks and the physics involved HERE
After close inspections, this is what I think of the new VF900. I have a lot of bad views but it doesn?t change the outcome, the VF900 will perform better. See all the explanation..
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.
4. Overall cooling with increase overthe VF700 (funny, but its simple)
The VF900 has a greater surface exposure, a large number of fins all around means more air can particles can strike the surface carrying the heat away.
To sum up!
Great job by ZALMAN, they managed to reduce a full 100 g (that?s awesome) so now you don?t have to worry about your VGA falling off.
If you need more help HERE or simply join the forums.
When you test it, let me know. Otherwise this is just educated guessing.
i thought cooling was all about surface area?
The statement "Less weight is always bad" is simply wrong. If you stick a 500g cube of copper to a graphics card, I guarantee that it will cool less well than a VF900. The design of the heatsink and parameters such as fin area and fin effeciency have far more effect.Originally posted by: elpres05
1. Weight is reduced (FLAW no.1) (VF700=250+ g, VF900=185 g)
Major part of the weight reduction is due to the removal of heavy base area that is present in all ZALMAN CPU and GPU coolers. I?ve had experience up close with ZALMAN coolers and the heaviest region is the base area. The VF900 differs completely; on one hand ZALMAN reduced the weight (good) while on the other hand they ran into a couple of design problems. To resolve them, they used heat pipes, adding to the total cost of the cooler.
2. Pure copper but only 180 g (FLAW No.2)
Less weight is always bad trust me, if the VF900 was an aluminum construction, then 180 g of it would have been quite enough. AT LOW FAN SPEEDS, the cooling of the VF900 will SUCK compared to the VF700.
Wrong again. As above, the mass is largely irrelevant in steady-state transfer - if you consider a constant heat input than all it affects is that initial temperature gradient.3. Cooling is entirely dependant on the fan speed.
Heat pipes are only there to connect the slim fins to the base material for instant heat transfer but on high level loads (Heat), the cooling is largely dependant upon the fan speed. As mentioned earlier, the VF900 doesn?t have enough mass to sustain ultra high heat levels of current monster GPU?s.