
Article Link: CES 2006: OCZ's Cryo-Z Phase Change Cooler
Now THAT is a crazy thought!Apoptosis wrote:If prices get down under $300 like OCZ hopes water cooling might be dated!
directly from the article.......personally, I think this is just fine for the majority of overclockers, aside from the crazy mofo's who want to get 6+ GHz on their Northwood P4.....I know I would pay out $350 for this unit, even better @ $275. I couldn't justify paying for a Prommie unless they got that low.......also, something else too to tell you this isn't a cheaply made cooler that uses coolant intended for an automobile, lol:We spoke with Tony (Big Toe) from OCZ who has had one for a lenghty period of time and he was seeing -22C at idle on an AMD FX-57 overclocked to 3.3GHz and around -10C under load.
it's worth the price IMOAlthough the OCZ Cryo-Z uses a compressor that has a label that says R134a that is not the case. OCZ didn't want to comment on exactly what coolant is used but did mention that they picked the best price versus performance coolant for what they wanted.
it shows on the picture above (if you look closely): -44.5Ckenc51 wrote:
.....I doubt it will go as low as -40C
I have a feeling it will work like a good peltier block, mayby down to -20C....
That temp would be without it attached to any cpu....sbohdan wrote:it shows on the picture above (if you look closely): -44.5Ckenc51 wrote:
.....I doubt it will go as low as -40C
I have a feeling it will work like a good peltier block, mayby down to -20C....
if it really gonna sell for around $200, then it will be a steal - a bargain that will knock out all other cooling solutions
"We're looking at the North American model of the Prometeia Mach II GT, and at its heart is a Danfoss NF9FX refrigeration compressor. Officially intended to run with R134a refrigerant, the Danfoss NF9FX draws up to 310W of power during peak operation and is rated to work in ambient temperatures up to 43°C."rpsgc wrote:How much is "a lot" ?kenc51 wrote:phase change uses ALOT of Watts.......
Bio-Hazard wrote:"We're looking at the North American model of the Prometeia Mach II GT, and at its heart is a Danfoss NF9FX refrigeration compressor. Officially intended to run with R134a refrigerant, the Danfoss NF9FX draws up to 310W of power during peak operation and is rated to work in ambient temperatures up to 43°C."
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm? ... 793&page=6
Ok, I'm obviously missing something here, but how would -40º be any better than -20º?!kenc51 wrote:The Mach II goes for ~$800......How can OCZ make something to compete with that? Even if they sell it for $400.....
It must have a smaller compressor.....I doubt it will go as low as -40C
I have a feeling it will work like a good peltier block, mayby down to -20C....
If we see the ECT Prometeia Mach 2 drop in price considerably over the next few months, then mayby OCZ is onto something.....
my2cent