The new Baram CPU tower heat pipe cooler from ThermoLab has been designed with optimal aerothermodynamics in mind, so the CPU stays nice and cool. With here area total of five ‘U’ shaped pipes this cooler has a total of ten vertical pipes for heat dissipation. Read on to see how the Baram does against more than a dozen LGA775 coolers!
Thermolab was established in 2005, and started by supplying companies with thermal solutions. While doing this they noticed there was a growing need for small PC systems. The server market has several coolers for small systems, but Thermolab noticed there was not much for the SFF PC market, so they developed the Silencer Series coolers. The Silencer Series coolers are low noise, low profile, heatpipe coolers. Now Thermolab has released their first tower cooler, the Baram. Thermolab says on their website, “Baram has a meaning of 'airflow' in Korean, and is the product for a cooling mania who is expecting to have a supreme cooling performance.”
I thought the cooler would have done better, but in all honesty I think the 35 cfm fan was most likely the culprit. On the other hand, not bad if you want it to be quiet. Also, what on earth is that Ultra power thing that was attached to the motherboard?
Gomeler wrote:That is indeed a slick looking heatsink. Only problem I could see is the price, at $50 it is lined up against the venerable Thermalright Ultra 120.
Agreed. My U-120X has served me well for almost 2 years. Now for some watercooling
Cyberpower generic case
B450M PRO-VDH MAX
Ryzen 5 3600 w/PBO/OC
CM Hyper 212 EVO push/pull
Corsair VENGEANCE LPX 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-3600 CL16
MSI RTX 3060 Ti Ventus 3X 8G OC LHR
Samsung 970 EVO Plus 500GB
6GB Seagate HDD
EVGA 650BQ 650W PSU
ASUS VE278 27" monitor, Dell E2216HV (vertical)
Logitech Z533 2.1 Speakers, G935 7.1 or G435 headset
MS LXM-00001 keyboard
Razer Deathadder Elite, XBOX One Lunar Shift controller
I've come a long way from my original Core2Duo E6750 build y'all!
Well I just bought one and the mounting kit that came with it is an mix of this barams kit and the kit from the baram 2010 it' also has stamped on the box (almost looks like an after thought) socket 1366 ready BUT the screws are still the same **** one's of the original kits no nice thumb screws....
temps with an push pull fan setup ( 1x silverstone 120mm air penetrator 1500rpm 37.5cfm and 1x silverstone stock 1000rpm 120mm RV02 case fan) my Phenom II x4 940BE @ 3.41GHz only reached 51c when folding and SMP A3 WU ,
and under an Tuniq Tower 120 with Coolermaster R4 fan 2000rpm 90cfm which got 56c doing the same workload and OC ..So an -5c difference I'm happy but not totally impressed I would have expected the baram with two fans vs tower 120 with 1 fan to have a much larger drop in temps
and those of you who use AMD AM2+ or better mother boards ans tall dimms like Corsair dominator with the DHX coolers on them it is possible to use this cooler just watch out when installing the fans as the one closest to the dimms will touch Dimm 1 a problem that could have been avoided had Thermolab made the baram either 2mm higher of thinner
Asus Crosshair V Formula AMD FX 8320 @ 3700MHz NB/HT @ 2600MHZ 2x 4GB Corsair Vengeance LP 1600 C9 1x Sapphire Radeon HD 7850 9550MHz core 1250MHz mem 1x Pioneer DVD-RW DVR212S SATA 2x Samsung HD502IJ 16MB cache 7200rpm raid0 1x Samsung HD502IJ 16MB cache 7200rpm storage 1x WD2500AAJS 8MB cache 7200rpm storage Thermolab Baram1 x 120mm CM R4 90cfm 2000rpm 1x SilverStone 120mm AP 1500rpm 37.5cfm SilverStone ST75F-P 750W PSU Full Modular SilverStone RaVeN RV02B-W