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[Review] k|ngp|n Cooling Liquid Nitrogen Containers – Pushing to the Limits


Posted by miahallen on 28 Jun 2011 / 3 Comments
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Tek-9 FAT

Tek-9 FAT - courtesy of kingpincooling.com

Tek-9 FAT – picture courtesy of kingpincooling.com

The Tek-9 FAT is the 7th generation GPU pot in the Tek lineage. It currently sells at KPC for only $225. This GPU pot was designed to tame the beast known as Fermi, but it was also critical to extreme overclockers around the globe to get a more massive pot for single-card benching after HWBot Rev 3.0 went live. Due to the way points are accumulated “at the bot,” single-card benching has taken center stage, and the slim pots that were previously so successful have taken a backseat. This pot is simply huge and at best you’ll only be able to run dual video cards with them, because even with a thin layer of insulation they’re still a triple-slot cooling solution. The upside is their ability to dissipate the massive heat loads associated with modern GPUs when pushed hard. (We suspect that, now that Rev 4.0 has gone live, we will see things balance back out again in terms of high-end SLI and Crossfire overclock runs.)

The Tek-9 FAT GPU container

The Tek-9 FAT GPU container


Dominance Memory Cooler

Dominance Memory Cooler - courtesy of kingpincooling.com

Dominance Memory Cooler – picture courtesy of kingpincooling.com

The Dominance Memory Cooler sells at KPC for $40, and is a specially-designed container for use with the Corsair Dominator GT and GTX DDR3 memory modules. The factory’s air cooling heat spreaders are removed from the Corsair DIMMs and this pot is screwed into the stock heat spreaders. Liquid nitrogen or dry ice can be applied to supercool the memory modules to help them achieve faster clock speeds and to withstand extreme voltage levels. We’ve done our testing with the famous GTX2 DIMMs, which are unfortunately no longer in production, as they utilize the extremely desirable Elpida Hyper MGH-E ICs which are capable of very high performance when fed high voltage levels, and have been know to scale very well with extreme cooling. The extra cooling should also help them survive the high voltage levels.

Here are a few more photos to show off the containers.

Full line up (1)

Full line up (2)

Full line up (3)

Full line up (4)


Next: Time to talk about performance…

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Written by miahallen

Well, I was playing with computers ever since my Dad got a Commodore 64 when I was 6 years old (1986), when I was 10 (1990) he bought a custom build 486DX33, and I was in love. Mostly back then I was just a kid playing games, but my fascination with computers had a start. Because I had no money of my own, I was stuck playing with my Dad's computers, and really couldn't "play" too much. So in 1998, the year I graduated, I spent some of my college savings to by a "computer for school", haha. It had two Voodoo2 12MB 3D accelerators in it, so you can imagine how much school work was done on it ;-) It had an AMD K6-233 that I had a really mild OC on, but my custom computer builder friend Aaron had done all the work. So I can't really take the credit there. My fascination with graphics just kept growing and growing over the years, and I was constantly in a struggle to keep my games looking as sharp and smooth as possible. OCing played a big role. My whole world was rocked in 2004 when I was deployed to Iraq as a US Army soldier. The whole year I was there I had a cheap IBM Thinkpad R40 with a 2GHz Celeron, 1GB DDR-333 RAM, a 60GB 4200RPM HDD, and ATI Radeon Mobility graphics (same technology as a 7000 series with only 16MB of memory). It started out rough as I was really into Command and Conquer Generals at the time, and the machine would only play the C&C slide show LOL. So, I downloaded PowerStrip, and OC'ed the GPU by 40%...amazingly, the game was playable! Things changed dramatically in 2007 when I met a guy named Matt while I was stationed in Japan. He introduced me to www.ocforums.com, and the "Benchmarking Team" there. I had not had much interest in benchmarking previously, I always though of myself as more practical. But, I thought I'd play along and I joined the team. My first introduction to an actual competition was was is "The Raptor Pit", "Forum Warz 2008" in the spring of 2008. I was running a Q6600 and an 8800GTX. With air cooling I was able to bench my Q6600 at over 4GHz, and tore up the competition in my class. Overall OCF won the Forum War in 2007, Winter and Summer of 2008, and 2009...that means five in a row. I was not part of the first one in 2007, but the four since then, I have participated in. After winning the 2008 Winter and Summer Warz, Tom's Hardware Guide announced they were looking for nominations for individuals to compete in their first ever international overclocking competition, called "Overdrive". I was nominated, and chosen to compete in the North American semi-finals in Los Angeles in November 2008. I was placed on "Team IRONMODS" as they only had two guys, yet three man teams were allowed. We won the semi-finals in LA, and our prize was a trip to Paris the following month, to compete with the best in the world. The following month, Ton, Jake, and myself flew to Paris as "Team USA" to face off against the best from Taiwan, France, Germany, and Italy. It was a very intense competition, but after two heated days of battle (16 hours of benching), we emerged the victors. Amidst our celebration, Ton and Jake officially invited me to join "Team IRONMODS" on a permanent basis, and I graciously accepted. Ton, aka "TiTON", is a world renown case moder, and is also very well known for some of the AMD overclocking he has done. Jake, aka "CPT.Planet", is a genius overclocker, and a really fun guy. The team has a great synergy when working together, we really have complementary styles. After winning the world championship in December 2008 things were a bit quite for a couple months, then in the spring of 2009 I received an invitation to the 2nd annual Gigabyte Open Overclocking Championship "GOOC". I would compete in the North American semi-final in LA, where the winner would win a ticket to the world championship in Taipei Taiwan during CES in June 2009. The competition was tough with 14 of the best from North America gathering for a 1 on 1 competition of OCing. But once again, I completed the competition well, and rose above the others. I won 1st place and the trip to the world finals in Taipei. My luck ran dry in Taipei where I started off with a bad motherboard, and went through 5 more during the course of the competition due to various reasons. Despite the poor finish in Taipei, I have high hopes to redeem myself next year.

3 Comments


EnJoY
2 yearss ago



Fantastic review Miah!

Tuesday News, 28th June 2011
2 yearss ago



[...] k|ngp|n’s LN2 Extreme Cooling Lineup @ TechReaction [...]

GSG-9
2 yearss ago



Great review and clocks on the Gulftown Miah!


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