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Thermalright NB-1
Dethroning Swiftech is what I remember Thermalright doing. It wasn't that
long ago when a small company came out with a heatsink called the SK-1, which
was basically a small piece of copper that had the capability of beating a
mammoth heatsink from Swiftech called the MC-462. If even for a few degrees what
the SK-1 didn't have was the weight, which made it a very much sought after
item. Not too long after that they did it again with the SLK900, and then one
more time with the SP94 and SP97. Most people have by now acknowledged
Thermalright for their excellent but simple design, and consider that when
buying a Thermalright heatsink they will have excellent overclocking
characteristics. This brings us to another story, the evolution of FSB
overclocking, and nothing hampers that more than voltages and excessive
chipset/Northbridge temperatures. Well it looks as though Thermalright is in the
fight again, because we observed some excellent temperatures from their newest
offering, the NB-1 chipset cooler...
NB-1 Specifications
Dimension:
L29 x W48.5 x H41 (mm) Fin only, without fan
W41.5 x H40 (mm) heat sink base
Weight:
70g (heat sink only)
Stock Fan:
Maker: DELTA
Model: AFB04512HA
Size: 45 x 45 x 10 (mm)
Bearing: Dual Ball Bearing System
Voltage: 12V
Speed: 6000 rpm
Air Flow: 11.80 CFM
Noise Level: 34dBA
Weight: 15.5g (0.55 OZ )
AMD: NF2, VIA KT333 & PRIOR (NF2, VIA KT400 & AFTER NOT SUPPORT)
Intel: All 8x5 Chipset
Features
The NB-1 is a worthy adversary of just about anything new on the
market. We have looked at some chipset fans in the past and so far our
recommendation would be to opt for a Swiftech, but if history proves us right
you can bet that the Thermalright offering will have more value for the same
temperatures. Lets have a look at what the NB-1 is all about...

The NB-1 kit contains everything you need to install it on
your pre-AMD 64 motherboard. For our 875P installation we used the two provided
clips and the keepers for the clips. Thermalright was even so kind to provide
some generic white paste. Two things that Thermalright needs to know.. No one
uses white paste, we all use Arctic Silver... The other, please give us some
instructions.

Spinning the NB-1 reveals a relatively smooth surface which
will need to be lapped. I guess that's the real difference between the cost of a
Swiftech and a Thermalright, paying someone to lap the things after manufacture.

The fan included is a 11CFM 6000 RPM that is very quiet... so
quiet you can't even hear it. It registered at 7000rpm during our testing, so
whether they have gone with a different fan we are not sure, but hopefully, in
time, our readers will let us know if their fans are different.
Performance & Installation
Pre-installation is a total pain in the butt if you still have
your board in your case.. We had to remove the Visiontek x800Pro, and the
existing Danger Den Z-Block, along with numerous wires to get to the chipset for
install. Thermalright didn't care to give any instructions, or if they did they
weren't in the box. We took a good hour or so to look at the bundle of clamps to
figure out which ones we needed to use for our P4C800E, and finally found that
the clips work just fine. Installation wasn't so easy either since there are
only two clamps and putting one side meant the other side would come up.. Having
two people for this would be a lot easier, but then again we can't totally blame
Thermalright since they are probably thinking people are installing the NB-1 on
a brand new motherboard that is OUT of the case. Other than the clips and
installation, we ran into no other problems.
We tested the Thermalright on our existing P4 Prescott powered
monster which consists of the following...
-
Intel Pentium 4 Prescott 3.0E
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Asus P4C800E
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Danger Den water cooling: TDX waterblock, Z-Block Chipset, D-4 Pump, BIX Micro
II, Maze 4 GPU.
-
OCZ EL4200 512x2
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OCZ 470W Power Supply
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Visontek x800 Pro 256mb
-
Lian Li PCV2000
Results

Not too bad considering our rival was a waterblock! ;)
The Thermalright NB-1 is a fine piece of hardware to gain the
most FSB out of your existing P4 socket 478 or AMD Socket 462. Sure it doesn't
offer the kind of temperatures you can gain from water cooling, but our Danger
Den setup is more than capable of whipping any water cooling setup, so it was
kind of the best in water vs. the best in air. Not to say that the Swiftech
Chipset cooler is anything bad either. We
most gripe a bit about the attachment and mounting mechanism though. Regardless
if Thermalright is thinking about new motherboards, most people already have
their board in their case before they are thinking of improving their FSB speed,
which from what we've seen Thermalright may not have taken into consideration to
seriously. Not to mention, the mounting hardware included requires either all
four metal mounting rings on the motherboard to be present, or lots of room if
you use the brackets. The size of the cooler alone is a disqualifying factor for
many boards, including our DFI 875B and Soltek PT880 Pro.
The n00bie factor is also there, if it weren't for our own
familiarity with overclocking and using Thermalright products we probably would
have thrown the kit out of the window out of frustration from not having
instructions on how to install it. BUT, the NB-1 performs magnificently, and
that is why we are still going to recommend it, but not without a note to you,
the readers, that if you decide to go the NB-1 route be weary of install and
pull your board out first.
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Club Overclocker
Rating |
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Innovation: |
8.5
out of 10 |
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Performance: |
9.5 out of 10 |
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Quality: |
7.5 out of 10 |
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Stability: |
N/A |
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Compatibility: |
5.0 out of 10 |
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Overclocking: |
9.5 out of 10 |
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Software
Pack: |
N/A |
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Value: |
7.0 out of 10 |
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Overall Rating 7.5 |
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|
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Skill Level |
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Project Skill Level
(10 being hardest) |
5 out of 10 |
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