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Surface Roughness Comparator: Surface finish is an important factor that we all look for when holding a new heatsink. Flipping a cooler over to see how well the base has been machined is a quick way to judge the attention to detail that was put into making it. The following FrostyTech Surface Roughness Comparator offers a concise cross section common machine surface finishes. Not every heatsink base will fit into the envelope of this gage, but it does offer a very handy set of representations. This commercially available gage has 22 machined surfaces from 2 to 500 microinches; Lapped (2, 4, and 8 µ" RA), Ground (8, 16, 32, and 63 µ" RA), Blanchard Ground (16 and 32 µ" RA), Shape Turned (32, 63, 125, 250, and 500 µ" RA), Profiled (63, 125, 250, and 500 µ" RA), and Milled (63, 125, 250, and 500 µ" RA).
Acoustic Samples: Listen to this Heatsink! Verax produce some of the quietest heatsinks around thanks to their brand of CAIRdB fans. The fans work with a different principle to move air over the heatsinks fins, so consequentially, there is an emphasis on noise suppression over thermal performance. In any event, to listen to this heatsink for yourself in operation, be sure to click on the little headphones icon below and download the Acoustic Sample MP3 file.
Sound Level Measurements: Listening to the actual noise a heatsink makes allows you to hear what pure numbers alone cannot get across. To further emphasize FrostyTech's reliance on cold hard facts when evaluating a heatsink, we also take Decibel readings with a sound level meter. These results may be higher than the manufacturer's listed specs, but then again these are real world measurements. Measurements are made on the (A) scale.
With the Verax P17CuX CAIRdB fan running at its slowest speed, the heatsink creates about 35 dBA noise inside our acoustic measurement chamber (sound meter is about 12" away from heatsink). What this means in the real world is that the Verax P17CuX is essentially silent, and only when the fan is running at full RPM do noise levels increase to just audible levels of ~41 dBA.
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