Quote: "Here is Swiftech’s flagship CPU waterblock, the Apogee GTZ i7. Now if you happen already have an Apogee GTZ for your LGA775 system the GTZ i7 is the same block but with the LGA1366 mounting hardware; speaking of which, you can buy the mounting kit, Apogee-GTZ-Ci7-HD, to transplant the waterblock from your LGA775 system to your LGA1366 system. In all I’m rather impressed with the Apogee GTZ Core i7 CPU water block. Combined with the rest of the cooling system this is the coolest the test bench has run when overclocked or otherwise. Granted, the cost of the overall cooling loop is almost double the cost of the Cooler Master V10, but it is actually quieter..."
Article URL: http://www.legitreviews.com/article/1067/1/

Quote: The Gelid Silent Spirit is slightly larger than a stock OEM cooler plus it utilizes four heat pipes. Does the Gelid Silent Spirit have what it takes to compete with the OEM cooler variants?
Quote: “Corsair needs no introduction...if you haven't heard of Corsair's excellent memory products you definitely need to climb out from under that rock you've been living under. Besides manufacturing memory products, which now includes DIMMs, the Flash Voyager line, and SSDs, over the past couple of years Corsair has branched out into PC cases, power supplies, and now liquid CPU cooling. Today I will be looking at Corsair's Hydro Series H50 CPU cooler, a self-contained liquid CPU cooler. Designed to just connect and go, the H50 costs only a few dollars more than an upper-end air cooler. Will the H50 keep an overclocked i7 nice and cool? Read on to see!"
Quote: There are many ways to design a good air powered CPU cooler, but just as many ways to affect the performance. Does the size of the fan matter as much as the size of the cooler? Does the flowing copper fins of something like a Thermaltake V1 CPU cooler ensure it’ll cool better? Though Cooler Master’s new Hyper N620 CPU cooler doesn’t look like a great big copper flower, it does have a lot of fins and a couple of big fans.