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Spire 5R265B1H3 SkiveStream (Review)  Page read 2921 times
 
Spire 5R265B1H3 SkiveStream

Supplied By: Spire
Written By: Rich
Price: $12.00
Written: 1/24/2003
 
 

 

 

The world of CPU coolers is completely overwhelming. I think I have used over 100 CPU coolers in the last 3 years just trying to get that extra 10Mhz out of whatever I was trying to push to the limit. I have seen some good and bad tries at perfection. This review isn't about that. It's about a cooler that is effective in the everyday system and as quiet as anything I have ever heard. I am looking at Spires part Number (5R265B1H3 SkiveStream).

 

I will be testing this cooler against the Dynatron DC1206BM. This has been my cooler of choice for some time now but it comes with a tall 6000 RPM fan and it can be a load at times. Unlike the Dynatron cooler the Spire cooler is not solid copper but it does have a copper center.

 

Below is the cooler I will be using as a comparison.

 
Here is the Spire cooler's stats From Spires website.
Socket A / 370 Cooling kit
Dimensions Heat sink : 60×62×40 mm (l × w × h)

12VDC Fan : 60×60×10mm

Bearing Ball bearing
Rated speed 4800 RPM +/-10%
Rated power 3.36 W
Noise level 30.0 dBA
Air flow 22.21CFM at 4800 RPM
Current 0.28 A
Life hours Ball: 50.000
Features 3 grip clip, copper base
Connector 3 Pin, mainboard
Application
Intel :   Pentium III ~ 1.4 GHz (FC-PGA2)
  Pentium III ~ 1.13 GHz (FC-PGA)
  Celeron ~ 2.2 GHz (PPGA)
AMD :   Athlon MP ~ 2400+ (Thoroughbred)
  Athlon XP ~ 2800+ (Thoroughbred)
  Athlon XP ~ 2100+ (Palomino)
  Athlon ~ 1.4 GHz (Thunderbird)
  Duron ~ 1.3 GHz (Morgan)
Thermal resistance 0.541 °C/W
Thermal type T725
 
Here are the system specs
  • AMD Athlon 2000+
  • ASUS A7N8X Deluxe
  • 512Mb PC-3200 (2X 256)
  • Aluminum case w/ 3 case fans
 

Here are some shots of the Coolers packaging. The cooler came in a nicely decorated box and inside it had protective pieces of plastic on the top and bottom.

 

I really liked the quality of this cooler. It has a three prong clip and ball bearing fan. The heat sink itself has a copper center. I have found this to be more effective than a solid copper heat sink. Below are some photos of the cooler. The cooler comes with some factory thermal tap on the bottom but I hate using this stuff. Not only is it ineffective but it makes a mess of the CPU.  However, with a fingernail and goo-gone, the thermal tape will come right off. The following are some tests that I ran.

 

The spire cooler surprised me when it pulled scores that were equal with the dynatron.  Even though the two coolers reached the same temperature, you could not hear the Spire cooler over the case fans, while the Dynatron cooler wined over everything. In my book the Spire cooler is the way to go. Check out the graph below to see the temperatures both coolers reached.

 
 

I give this cooler an A+ for all stock or mildly overclocked CPU's. The fact that it can provide the same temperatures as the Dynatron without the noise makes me like this cooler for the everyday system.

 
Pro's
  • 3 Prong clip
  • Ball bearing fan
  • High Quality
  • Great efficiency
  • Great looks
Con's
  • Probably not the cooler for the heavy overclocker
 
 
 
 
   
 

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