Thermaltake RamOrb Memory Cooler East Syracuse NY

Thermaltake takes the ORB product line in a whole new direction, designing a cooler for your RAM. So if you need to keep your RAM cool and you're looking for a product that can suit your needs, read this review to see if this is the memory cooler for you.

Eastern Computer Warehouse
(315) 449-0111
5802 Bridge Street
East Syracuse, NY
A2Z Cables
(315) 433-1200
2600 James
Syracuse, NY
CNY Laser Service Inc
(315) 437-7574
380 N Midler Avenue
Syracuse, NY
Xtreme Computers, Inc.
(800) 213-6007
201 West Genessee Street Suite 250
Fayetteville, NY
Dynamic Pc's
(315) 751-3124
300 Darlington
Syracuse, NY
Jay's Custom Computers
(315) 440-4441
102 East Manlius Street
East Syracuse, NY
Eastern Computer Warehouse
(315) 449-0111
3470 Erie Boulivard East
Syracuse, NY
Peter Perry
(315) 687-7757
8502 Green Lakes Road
Fayetteville, NY
Wilson Computer Group, Inc.
(315) 476-3991
Syracuse, NY
Miami Computer Supply Inc
(315) 454-0038
5858 E Molloy Road # 118A
Syracuse, NY
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Thermaltake RamOrb Memory Cooler




Introduction

Several years ago I ran an experiment on a set of Samsung PC-100 memory to find the effects of cooling memory and if it would benefit overclock performance. The processor used was an Intel Pentium III running at 500 MHz with plenty of potential for overclocking. At the time memory did not come with any type of heatsink or heat shield; the concept wasn't even thought of and Mushkin had not yet released their heatsink which later became the industry standard.

To cool the memory, which at the time wasn't much warmer than ambient air I used a government surplus heatsink that was shipped to me in a two foot section. The aluminum bar was cut down to size with a hack saw and held in place with several rubber bands and standard silicon thermal paste as was the standard at the time. The appearance wasn't pretty and neither were the test results, I concluded that additional cooling to the sample PC 100 memory did not gain a performance advantage over the bare modules, even when pushed to 150 FSB.

Times have certainly changed and even budget memory comes with a heatsink these days. Memory now runs much warmer than the ambient air surrounding it and companies are spending a great deal of time and effort to cool their products. While early coolers were held in place with what amounted to double sided tape from 3M and the coolers were more for appearance than performance, a few companies have invested in thermal transfer material to effectively transfer heat away from the RAM and pass it to the cooler.

Thermaltake is now taking the idea of the cooling RAM to a new level and incorporating one of their most popular product lines. The new Thermaltake RamOrb (PN: CL-R0029) is now shipping to retail and e-tail locations and will be available in the coming weeks.

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