Review: Corsair Hydro Series H50 - taking on the air-cooled establishment

by Tarinder Sandhu on 30 June 2009, 09:03 4.0

Tags: Corsair Hydro H50, Corsair

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System setup and notes


Cooler Corsair Hydro H50 Thermalright Ultra 120 eXtreme Intel stock cooler 
Fan Corsair 120mm Thermalright 120mm Intel 92mm
Approx. price at time of writing £59.79
£42.54
£52.31 (with 1,600rpm fan)
£15
CPU Intel Core i7 965 EE @ 3.20GHz (1.2625V in BIOS) and 3.86 GHz (1.3625V in BIOS)
Chassis Akasa Omega
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD5
BIOS revision F4b
Memory 6GB Crucial DDR3-1,066 CL7
Graphics Card Sapphire Radeon HD 4870 512MB
Mainboard software Intel  9.1.1.1012
Graphics driver CATALYST 9.6
PSU Corsair HX1000W
Operating System Windows Vista Business SP1, 64-bit

Tests

Benchmarks Prime95 torture test
Lavalys Everest Ultimate 5.0.2 data-logging software
Highest stable overclock at 1.40V

Setup notes

The first set of temperature measurements are taken from the Core i7 965 Extreme Edition (C0 stepping) running at its native speed and voltage - 3.20GHz and 1.2625V, respectively.

To stress the coolers some, we've then overclocked the chip to 3.86GHz and raised the processor's Vcore from 1.2625V to 1.3625V to ensure stability and add some real heat into the mix. In this instance, Turbo Boost is turned off.

The actual Core i7 chip is practically irrelevant because recent D0-stepping Core i7 920s have hit 4GHz-plus on basic air cooling: the premise here is to see how the coolers respond to wicking away the heat produced by an over-volted Nehalem CPU.

Housed inside an Akasa Omega with the chassis' front fan - 120mm x 25mm - switched on, only one other fan is used, save for the heatsinks'. The case's rear-mounted 120mm fan is removed when testing the Corsair Hydro H50 but put back in place, as an exhaust fan, for the other coolers, as you will see by going back to the previous page.

The Thermalright Ultra eXtreme 120 is a classy LGA1366 cooler which costs around £43 without a fan and £52 with the 1,600rpm-rated 120mm fan that we've tested with.  Note that you can add a second fan to the Ultra 120 eXtreme, for better performance.

Adding some reference numbers by way of an Intel stock heatsink, as found in the PIB (processor-in-box), the air coolers both use Thermalright's TIM.

The stress is created by running the Prime95 torture test on four (50 per cent load) or eight threads (100 per cent load) for a duration of 30 minutes at a time. The ambient, idle, and load temperatures are noted, as well as aural performance.

Lastly, we investigate the highest stable speed with 1.4V inputted in the BIOS.

We tried to keep the ambient temperature steady during testing: it hovered between 21.2°C and 22.5°C.