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| First look at Asetek’s 9800GX2 waterblock: Water-cooling for the masses |
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| Hardware | ||||||
| By Theo Valich | ||||||
| Friday, April 04, 2008 10:52 | ||||||
Page 1 of 2 San Jose (CA) – Water-cooling and mainstream are words you typically don’t mention in one sentence. But what is typically an expensive technology for enthusiast is getting much more interesting for a greater range of gamers with an affordable waterblock that will be offered by Asetek soon, TG Daily learned.
Asetek claims that the existing systems are easily upgradeable from their previous ATI/Nvidia solutions to this one. Given the fact that majority of GPU waterblocks are a “one-off design“ and not reusable for future graphics cards, OEMs are not keen on implementing water-cooling products in their products. Sadly, this fact also isolates the majority of users: If you are not a hardcore overclocker or a deep-pocketed enthusiast, the motivation and finances to purchase a new waterblock for every graphics card will come to an end sooner or later.
To find out more about this new product, TG Daily sat down with Andre Sloth Eriksen, founder and CEO of the Danish company. What we saw is an off-the-shelf HP Blackbird 002 system equipped with an Intel Core 2 Extreme Q9650 processor, 8 GB of system memory, a couple of hard drives and other components you can order from HP’s website. However, Asetek had replaced the standard water-cooling core for the 8800GTX/Ultra card with its dual-GPU 9800GX2 cooler. The setup was SLI-ready, which means you could run four GPUs in this PC.
After seeing the heated performance of the air-cooled card, we removed it from the system, waited until it cooled down, disassembled it and installed the water-cooling system. Yours truly had the honor of assembling the card, and I have to admit that it is a really straightforward and easy process. After mounting was done, we installed the card back into the system and ran the same tests again.
Read on the next page: 30 degrees improvement with the water cooler. |
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