Fractal Design’s Celsius+ S28 AIO is one of the best coolers I’ve had the pleasure of testing. In it’s completely silent mode, which runs quieter than my noise meter can properly record, it still handles over 250W with Intel’s i9-13900K. In it’s PWM mode, it’s capable of handling over 290W.
AIO Cooling , Air Cooling , AMD Ryzen 7 7700X , Benchmark , CPU Cooling , Intel i9-13900K , quiet cooling , Review
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IceBerg Thermal’s IceSLEET G4 Silent Air Cooler Review – tested with Ryzen 7700X & Intel’s i9-13900K
Iceberg Thermal’s IceSLEET G4 Silent provides good cooling capacity with whisper quiet noise levels
Air Cooling , AMD Ryzen 7 7700X , Benchmark , CPU Cooling , Fanless , Intel i9-13900K
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A cooler without fans?! Testing Noctua’s NH-P1 with Ryzen 7700x and Intel’s i9-13900K
Noctua needs no introduction, being well known amongst PC cooling enthusiasts for their unmatched customer […]
AIO Cooling , Benchmark , CPU Cooling , Intel i9-13900K , Review
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DeepCool LT520 Review – Strong Performance and Good Value in a $109 package
TLDR: Strong Cooling Performance, Value Price of $109 USD, but it runs a little louder than the competition.
Benchmark , CPU , Intel i9-13900K , Review , Uncategorized
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No, you don’t need a high end cooler for Intel’s i9-13900K – Cooling Scaling Part 2
Even a SFF Air cooler will provide 86.7% of the performance that an AIO would bring in the most thermally demanding workloads
Benchmark , CPU , Intel i9-13900K , Review
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Intel i9-13900k Power and Cooling Scaling Overview
In gaming, enforcing a 95 watt power limit results in a 5.7% performance loss. More intensive workloads will cause the decifit will increase, in Cinebench imposing a 95 watt limit results in a 30% performance loss.