Titan Skalli CPU Cooler Review
By Rafael Otto Coelho on November 11, 2009


Introduction

This time we tested Titan Skalli, a tower design CPU cooler with two 8 mm heatpipes and a 100 mm fan. Let's see if it performs better than other similar coolers.

Skalli box is made of thin cardboard paper, with a window in the front that allows you to see the fan.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 1: Box.

Inside the box we found the cooler with the fan, user manual, installation hardware and a tube of white thermal compound.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 2: Box contents.

Figure 3 gives you an idea of what the Skalli looks like.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 3: Titan Skalli.

Titan Skalli

In a front view we see Skalli's classic design, with "U" heat pipes, a small aluminum base and also aluminum fins. The fan is protected by a plastic cage.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 4: Front view.

In Figure 4 we can see the two 8 mm heatpipes. It looks a lot like the Evercool Buffalo we reviewed recently.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 5: Side view.
 
In Figure 6 we can see Skalli's rear side.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 6: Rear view.

Titan Skalli (Cont'd)

In Figure 7 we see the top side of the cooler. The four heatpipes tips are covered by metallic caps.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 7: Top view.

In Figure 8 we can see the fan details. It is made of plastic, painted to achieve a metallic look. It has a four pin connector, which shows it has PWM speed control. The fan is attached to the heatsink with two metal clips.
Titan Skalli
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Figure 8: Fan detail.

On the base, the heatpipes made direct contact to the CPU. This system has proven to be very efficient, eliminating one extra thermal resistance layer. The base is very smooth, almost mirror-finished, as you can check in Figure 9.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 9: Base.

Installation

The Titan Skalli comes with three holding clip sets. The first clip set comes screwed to the cooler base and fits sockets 1156 and 1366. Second set, shown in Figure 10, fits socket 775 CPUs. There is also a third clip for use with AMD processors.

Titan Skalli
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Figure 10: Clips.

Installation is very simple, it took almost no strength to attach it to the motherboard. The access to the press holders is easy. It did not inferferd with any motherboard component. In Figure 11 you can see how it looks installed into our case.
Titan Skalli
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Figure 11: Installed into case.

How We Tested

We are adopting the following methodology on our CPU cooler reviews.

First we chose the CPU with the highest TDP (Thermal Design Power) we could: a Core 2 Extreme QX6850, which has a 130 W TDP. The choice for a CPU with a high TDP is obvious: as we want to measure how efficient the tested cooler is, we need a processor that gets very hot. This CPU works by default at 3.0 GHz, but we overclocked it to 3.33 GHz, in order to heat it as much as possible.

We took noise and temperature measurements with the CPU idle and under full load. In order to achieve 100% CPU load on the four processing cores we ran Prime95 on the "In-place Large FFTs" option and three instances of StressCPU program, at the same time.

We also compared the reviewed cooler to the Intel stock cooler (with copper base), which comes with the processor we used, and also with some other coolers we tested using the same methodology.

Temperature measurements were taken with a digital thermometer, with the sensor touching the base of the cooler, and also with the core temperature reading (given by the CPU thermal sensor) from the program SpeedFan. For this measurement we used an arithmetic average of the four core temperature readings.

Sound pressure level (SPL) was measured with a digital noise meter, with its sensor placed 4" (10 cm) from the fan. We turned off the video board cooler so it wouldn't interfere with the results, but this measurement is only for comparative purposes, because a precise SPL measurement needs to be done inside an acoustically insulated room with no other noise sources, that we do not have.

Hardware Configuration

Software Configuration

Used Software

Error Margin

We adopted a 2 oC error margin, i.e. temperature differences below 2 oC are considered not relevant.

Our Tests

On the tables below you can see our results. We ran the same tests with the coolers shown on below tables. Each test was ran with the CPU idle and the with the CPU fully loaded. On BigTyp 14Pro, TMG IA1, NH-U12P and ISGC-300 the tests were done with the fan at full speed and at minimum speed. The other coolers were connected directly to the motherboard and it controls the fan speed based on CPU load level and temperature on PWM models. ISGC-400 and iCEAGE Prima Boss were tested at minimum speed on idle test and at maximum speed on full load test.

CPU Idle

Cooler Room Temp. Noise Fan Speed Base Temp. Core Temp.
Intel stock 14 ºC 44 dBA 1000 RPM 31 ºC 42 ºC
BigTyp 14Pro (min) 17 ºC 47 dBA 880 RPM 29 ºC 36 ºC
BigTyp 14Pro (max) 17 ºC 59 dBA 1500 RPM 26 ºC 34 ºC
Akasa Nero 18 ºC 41 dBA 500 RPM 26 ºC 35 ºC
Cooler Master V10 14 ºC 44 dBA 1200 RPM 21 ºC 26 ºC
TMG IA1 (max) 16 ºC 47 dBA 1500 RPM 22 ºC 30 ºC
TMG IA1 (min) 16 ºC 57 dBA 2250 RPM 21 ºC 30 ºC
Zalman CNPS 10X Extreme 16 ºC 44 dBA 1200 RPM 21 ºC 29 ºC
Thermaltake ISGC-100 18 ºC 44 dBA 1450 RPM 35 ºC 49 ºC
Noctua NH-U12P (low) 15 ºC 42 dBA 1000 RPM 20 ºC 30 ºC
Noctua NH-U12P 15 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 20 ºC 28 ºC
Noctua NH-C12P 17 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 23 ºC 28 ºC
Thermaltake ISGC-200 21 ºC 43 dBA 1100 RPM 31 ºC 35 ºC
Schythe Kabuto 22 ºC 42 dBA 800 RPM 29 ºC 34 ºC
Arctic Cooling Alpine 11 Pro 20 ºC 43 dBA 1500 RPM 32 ºC 39 ºC
ISGC-300 (min) 18 ºC 42 dBA 800 RPM 26 ºC 30 ºC
ISGC-300 (max) 18 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 24 ºC 26 ºC
SilverStone NT06-E 21 ºC 66 dBA 2600 RPM 30 ºC 41 ºC
Zalman CNPS9700 NT 22 ºC 48 dBA 1700 RPM 28 ºC 35 ºC
Scythe Mugen-2 17 ºC 41 dBA 700 RPM 25 ºC 30 ºC
ISGC-400 (min) 17 ºC 44 dBA 850 RPM 24 ºC 30 ºC
Cooler Master Vortex 752 20 ºC 48 dBA 1700 RPM 32 ºC 44 ºC
iCEAGE Prima Boss (min) 22 ºC 42 dBA 1000 RPM 29 ºC 36 ºC
Evercool Buffalo 17 ºC 51 dBA 1850 RPM 22 ºC 29 ºC
Scythe Big Shuriken 20 ºC 42 dBA 900 RPM 31 ºC 39 ºC
Cooler Master Hyper TX3 21 ºC 44 dBA 1700 RPM 30 ºC 39 ºC
Titan Skalli 20 ºC 43 dBA 1200 RPM 27 ºC 34 ºC

CPU Fully Loaded

Cooler Room Temp. Noise Fan Speed Base Temp. Core Temp.
Intel stock 14 ºC 48 dBA 1740 RPM 42 ºC 100 ºC
BigTyp 14Pro (min) 17 ºC 47 dBA 880 RPM 43 ºC 77 ºC
BigTyp 14Pro (max) 17 ºC 59 dBA 1500 RPM 35 ºC 70 ºC
Akasa Nero 18 ºC 48 dBA 1500 RPM 34 ºC 68 ºC
Cooler Master V10 14 ºC 54 dBA 1900 RPM 24 ºC 52 ºC
TMG IA1 (max) 16 ºC 47 dBA 1500 RPM 27 ºC 63 ºC
TMG IA1 (min) 16 ºC 57 dBA 2250 RPM 25 ºC 60 ºC
Zalman CNPS 10X Extreme 16 ºC 51 dBA 1900 RPM 24 ºC 50 ºC
Thermaltake ISG-100 18 ºC 50 dBA 1800 RPM 58 ºC 93 ºC
Noctua NH-U12P (low) 15 ºC 42 dBA 1000 RPM 28 ºC 59 ºC
Noctua NH-U12P 15 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 25 ºC 54 ºC
Noctua NH-C12P 17 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 37 ºC 76 ºC
Thermaltake ISGC-200 21 ºC 48 dBA 1900 RPM 42 ºC 68 ºC
Scythe Kabuto 22 ºC 47 dBA 1200 RPM 38 ºC 63 ºC
Arctic Cooling Alpine 11 Pro 20 ºC 51 dBA 2300 RPM 49 ºC 85 ºC
ISGC-300 (min) 18 ºC 42 dBA 800 RPM 36 ºC 64 ºC
ISGC-300 (max) 18 ºC 46 dBA 1400 RPM 31 ºC 56 ºC
SilverStone NT06-E 21 ºC 66 dBA 2600 RPM 39 ºC 96 ºC
Zalman CNPS9700 NT 22 ºC 56 dBA 2600 RPM 34 ºC 63 ºC
Scythe Mugen-2 17 ºC 46 dBA 1300 RPM 28 ºC 54 ºC
ISGC-400 (max) 17 ºC 47 dBA 1400 RPM 36 ºC 69 ºC
Cooler Master Vortex 752 20 ºC 55 dBA 2300 RPM 48 ºC 92 ºC
iCEAGE Prima Boss (max) 22 ºC 53 dBA
2000 RPM 35 ºC 59 ºC
Evercool Buffalo 17 ºC 51 dBA 1850 RPM 32 ºC 67 ºC
Scythe Big Shuriken 20 ºC 50 dBA 1500 RPM 51 ºC 85 ºC
Cooler Master Hyper TX3 21 ºC 53 dBA 2700 RPM 39 ºC 66 ºC
Titan Skalli 20 ºC 47 dBA 1550 RPM 37 ºC 69 ºC

The next graph will give you an idea on how many degrees Celsius the CPU core was hotter than room temperature during the tests, in idle.

Titan Skalli 

The next graph will give you an idea on how many degrees Celsius the CPU core was hotter than room temperature during the tests, under full load.

Titan Skalli 

Main Features

Titan Skalli main features are:

Conclusions

Titan Skalli is a good cooler. Its performance was, by the error margin we adopted, practically the same of Evercool Buffalo and Cooler Master Hyper TX3, two coolers with very similar design.

Its noise level is also good. Skalli is a very quiet cooler even with the CPU under full load. The installation is quite simple and, besides some users hating the Intel standard cooler holding mechanism, it is not a heavy cooler so don't be worried about it unlocking from the motherboard holes.

The big problem with Skalli is its cost/benefit ratio. There are some cooler with similar design and performance, like Evercool Buffalo and Cooler Master Hyper TX3, with a lower price point. But Skalli price can change in the future, since the market laws of offer and demand are still valid.

Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/860


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