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Corsair Air Series A50 Performance CPU Cooler
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| Wed Oct 13, 2010 | 5:30P| PermaLink |
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It used to be that when someone mentioned the name Corsair, most people would think of memory as the only product that they were well known for. Over time thy branched out a bit and started delivering a quality built power supply and they’re still a leader in that respect. Fast forward to more recent times and we find Corsair is developing products in both cases and CPU cooling. With cases like the Obsidian Series cases and the Hydro series CPU coolers, Corsair has kicked down doors releasing new products to give users an almost complete Corsair solution for everything but the motherboard, CPU and expansion cards; otherwise you can one stop shop for most of the rest of the major components.
As if things weren’t doing well enough with all the latest products to hit the shelves, I was given the opportunity to look at the smaller of two of the new air cooling solutions that Corsair is bringing to its loyal customers. I mentioned this is the smaller of the two, and it is just that, and soon you will be reading about the bigger brother as well. The version we are looking at today is based on three 8mm heatpipes making direct contact with the processor. Heat is then carried into the aluminum fins to allow the included 120mm fan to rid this cooler of the heat incurred when overclocking, or just cooling in the summer months."
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FULL STORY @
PERFORMANCE (http://mailbot.tweaktown.com/cgi-bin/dada/mail.cgi/r/TweakTown_News/h/20100929113405/www.tweaktown.com/reviews/3549/corsair_air_series_a50_performance_cpu_cooler/index.html/)
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ASRock has added four H55 solutions to their line of Intel motherboards
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| Mon May 31, 2010 | 9:02A| PermaLink |
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"This is the first board we've reviewed with the H55 chipset and I
have to say I'm highly impressed with the performance numbers we were seeing
against its older brother the P55 chipset. ASRock did a good job of making
an affordable motherboard with great overclocking capabilities at a cost
that will make budget PC builders happily hand over their hard-earned
dollars to purchase one. The smallish ATX form factor was a bit
disappointing, but ASRock used the rest of the real estate wisely enough to
include two PCIe x16 slots, four SATA ports, and three USB ports for six USB
2.0 devices."
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FULL STORY @
PCPER (http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=903)
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Time stamped:
5:18AM, 05.21.2013
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