Arctic Cooling Accelero S1 Rev2
Arctic Cooling Accelero S1 Rev2 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff_Tom   
Monday, 19 May 2008 18:35
Article Index
Arctic Cooling Accelero S1 Rev2
Temperatures, Overclocking
Conclusion
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When thinking of buying a new heatsink the first thing that comes to mind isn't usually a new one for your video card but rather your processor. But of course there are quite a number of people who look for the performance edge wherever they can get it and an add on VGA cooler can be quite helpful in that respect. Today we have one to look at from Arctic Cooling, the Accelero S1 Revision 2 cooler with Turbo Module fans.

  

Here are the specs.

Heat Sink: 138(L) x 215(W) x 33(H) mm
Heat pipe: 6 mm x 4
Weight: 268 g
Accessories: 2 Voltage Regulator Heat Spreaders
8 Memory Heat Sinks
Warranty: 6 Years

Application:
ATI:

Radeon HD 38xx series, 36xx series, 2600, 2400, X1950, X1900, X1800, X1650, X1600, X1550, X1300 series
nVIDIA:
GeForce 9600 GT, 8800GTS(G92), 8800GT, 8600, 8500, 8400, 7950GT, 7900, 7800, 7600, 7300, 6800, 6600 series (except 7X00 GS AGP)

The card comes packaged in a rectangular box which is just the right size for a card this large, meaning not unnecessarily big. Rectangular in shape it features Call of Juarez on the box although we didn't see it in our bundle. Inside the card is packed nicely in Styrofoam with a fairly typical hardware bundle. DVI-to-VGA adapter, DVI-to-HDMI adapter, molex to PCI-Express power adapter, HDTV cable, and S-video cable. No extra software bundle is included. Arctic Cooing also included their Turbo Module coolers as well which fit easily into the Accelero. Here are the specs on the fan.

  • Dual High Performance Fans
  • Enhance Cooling Performance
  • Extremely Quiet
  • High Reliability
  • Easy Installation
  • Low Weight
  • Long Lifetime
  • 6 Years Warranty

Installation takes a little time and patience but isn't extraordinarily hard. With our GeForce 9600 GT video card we began by removing all the screws on the back of the card. That is quite simple to do and afterwards the stock heatsink comes off quite easily. You'll then want to remove the backs of all the memory heatsink so they can affix themselves to the memory modules on the graphics cards. After that,  remove the sticky tag on the main GPU heatsink and put the spacers on the holes to screw into. There are both "A" and "B" holes depending on the graphics card you are using. Lining up these four holes with the GPU is a little bit tricky but once you have it lined up you can start screwing in the screws. If all you want is a passive heatsink at this point you are done.

  

We went further though and installed the Turbo Module coolers. This is a little bit harder and you'll need to use a flat head screwdriver to push open the aluminum fins to stick the fans into so it clips into the fan and remains steady. You'll hide the power cord in there as well so it doesn't get in the way of the fans. After this attached the power cord on the fans to one matching on your motherboard and you're ready to go.

  

Let's move onto testing.

 

 

 



Last Updated on Tuesday, 20 May 2008 09:37
 

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