The Cooler Master Company as we know is a major manufacturer of all of the great after market cooling, for most of the times they have made are great all round cases with the legal amount of airflow to cool those heat producing cards and silicones alike. Plus also the more controversial, in my idea, the ultimate PSU that included having a non-standard power lead of about 16 amps in the AC to DC line; for the purpose of having a safe and the line strong enough to support such high wattage, just to say, if you use about 80% of 1000watts, then we mostly see sparks and exploding boxes flying through the air if your PSU only support a 10 amp capacity. But we will never use that much power in a normal or a average gaming rig, for what you need is a great cooler from Cooler Master, this is the hyper N620.
The hyper N620 is an after Market Cooling solution from the best, or the worst if you have a bad experience on them, with the cooler being a tower heat-sink, its real purpose of having the heat of the CPU to rise with eight individual all copper heat-pipes, and also to spread it further with the horizontal aluminium fins that effectively reach at every look and cranny of its surface area, then its dual 12cm fans bring the cool air in one side and then exhaust the hot air in the other. With the fin design being the more awkward sight, they are slightly bent sideways with the side overlapping, to theoretically blow out the air in all of the sides of the cooler, to cool the near heat-sink MOSFET. To make thing better or worse, the N620 has a rubber dampener to reduce the vibrations made by the dual fans running at full speed; and also the compatibility support of all of recent AMD sockets and Intel’s LGA775 socket format, but cannot have any of those extension pins to support these new LGA1366 socket.
Now for the performance factors of the N620, we fired up the Intel’s hottest and the most not so energy-efficient processor the QX6850. We will going to have a dual test with the stock setting enabled and the over-clocked settings in the next. First of the stock settings go with an idle temp count of 36 degrees and the load with Crysis at low resolutions ( lower the resolutions the CPU is expensively used) giving an overall temp of about 48 degrees. For the over-clocked setting however, says a different story, with the idle temp going with the load temp in stock settings, and guessing that the load in Crysis did not go that well and crashed into such high temperature, we have to guess… about 78 degrees just before it crashed. For the overall conclusion, is a good dual fan after market cooling from Cooler Master but not real up to the high temp readings where it really struggled, if you want this and have a dual core processor, this can be a great break for you, only $80 online, but for the enthusiast modders, who want a capable cooler, this is the not one for you.
I have got the exact same thing at home!