Techniz -- The Thermalright V-1 is a very good VGA cooler in terms of the
performance and the stylish look. The Thermalright V-1 VGA Cooler performs
very well during our testing. Moreover, it is made of fully aluminum with
nickel plated which is a very good material for cooling. The design of
this VGA Cooler is very stylish, nice, and light weight. It also support
dual 80mm cooling fan to mount in the top and bottom of the heatsink..
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Techgage -- In the prospect of building a quiet PC, cooling the CPU can prove to be a problem. To take care of this 'tall' order, Thermalright brings us the HR-01. This passive cooler requires no fan at all to operate. If overclocking suits your fancy, they even offer a duct!
AnAndTech -- Almost two months ago the prototype for what became known as the Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme showed up on our doorstep. The review of the excellent Ultra-120 was just finished and that cooler moved to the top of our performance charts along with the Tuniq Tower 120 and some specialized configurations of a few other coolers.
techPowerUp -- Thermalright is well known for making world-class CPU coolers. Now they have entered the VGA cooling business. The Thermalright V1 Ultra is an improved version of the V1 and features a third heatpipe. Not only does it cool well, it does this without creating a lot of fan noise. During our testing the cooler could easily beat a low-cost watercooling solution.
OCIA -- The Ultra-90 encompasses the same basic features as the XP-90's and XP-120; heatpipes through an array of fins connecting to a base for contact, but the Ultra-90 is a tower design. Thermalright claims it can outperform it's predecessor, the XP-90, using a lower CFM fan. Today we'll see how it compares to the XP-90C using the same fan.
System Cooling -- When Thermalright released their XP-120 heatsink, they almost redefined a cooling medium that many thought was reaching its limits. When the more compact XP-90 came out, I was surprised and pleased to find that it not only performed just as well as the monster 120, but had much better compatibility. For that reason, the XP-90 was the no-brainer choice for heatsink of the year, as far as we were concerned. Today, we're going to take a look at a heatsink that just might wrestle that crown away from the XP-90. Never one to sit on their own accomplishments, the folks at Thermalright are trying to do their own champion one better, in the form of the XP-90C. It's the same XP-90 we know and love, except this one is solid copper.
TweakNews -- The HR-03 VGA cooler is a great leap forward for Thermalright, putting them back in the VGA cooling business with a vengeance. The innovative design and dual configuration mounting system combine to make the HR-03 a real winner. Good passive cooling performance and monstrous active cooling should make gamers very happy, and anyone overclocking a card with this cooler and fan combo won't have to worry about heat holding them back.
Big Bruin -- Thermalright has been one of the top manufacturers in air-cooling solutions since the company was founded. Providing solutions for AMD and Intel processors, motherboard Northbridge and graphic processors. Recently, manufacturers have been releasing bigger processor heatsinks, which can sometimes cause space issues with certain motherboards. Thermalright's latest solution is large, but instead of spreading out, they have decided to make it tall, similar to a "High-Rise", and they have chosen to skip a fan all together. This allows for a totally noiseless processor cooling solution. I will take a look at the Thermalright HR-01 to see how it cools on today's processors, and whether it is a viable noiseless solution.