What the press says about CoolWhip

Overclocking.dk had a roundup of 4 of the most popular coolers. Here's what they wrote about the CoolWhip™ Air Slot1:

...The results speaks for themselves. Of the tested coolers,  this is the best and it keeps the CPU temperature at an impressive 35ºC while chunkin' away on Unreal...

...There's only 1ºC temperature difference across the heat sink, which is also impressive. It's nice to receive a product, where you can tell that the manufacturer has done some actual thinking when designing it...

 

 

TestIndex has tested our CoolWhip™ Liquid 120/120, and here's some clips from the review:

...Now we get to what most people is interested in when dealing with systems like this one; speed. All I can say is that this system is fast, very fast...

...This means, that with a CPU that won't even boot windows at 550Mhz with one of the best air coolers on  the market (ed. note: talking about the CoolWhip™ Air Slot1), we are able to take it to 580MHz 100% stable...

 

 

Overclockin.com has tested the CoolWhip Air Slot1 Dual (the standard and silent versions in one) and the CoolWhip Air Slot1 Turbo. They also tested the TEC/peltier upgrades available for the heatsinks. Here some clips from the review:

 

...When you can buy a heatsink and use it for Celerons or PIII's and even add a Peltier cooler to it with nothing more than an addition of an upgrade kit including the Peltier, gasket and coldplate, you have to be impressed.
The heatsinks perform extremely well considering their size.  When you consider the heatsink is approx. 3/4" shorter than and approx. 2/3's the thickness of the Alpha P125 (which has problems with clearance on some motherboards and cases) and performs very close to the Alpha heatsink, it is easy to see that the heatsink does it's job very well.  And when you think about how easy it is to add a Peltier to this setup, it is very hard to fault....

...The Peltier definitely took the processor temperature down very low.  It easily handled all the heat that the Celeron could put off at 300MHz (like that is a big surprise...).  There was also only about an 11 to 12 degree increase in temperature at the 450MHz and 464MHz level.  The processor was still well below room temperature at the elevated speeds...

 

 

Privat Computer magazine issue 10/99 and 11/99 reviewed several coolers including the CoolWhip™ Air Slot1 and the CoolWhip™ Air Socket370. Here's some of what they wrote:

...The CoolWhip Heat sinks are made of Copper rather than aluminum as usually seen, the construction and the design is very well thought out, and they perform extremely well. They are very compact, and there should therefore be no clearance problems in any mainboard...

...The Dual mode version generates some noise in the Turbo mode (but far less than some other high-performance Slot1 Heat sinks that we have seen), and in silent mode you can't hear it at all, though some of the performance is sacrificed....

...The S370 version is not quite as potent as its bigger brother, but still manages to hand out some serious beating to the Global Win Alternatives. The ALPHA S370 (PFH6030MU) is still more powerful, but is also considerably larger...

...All in all the CoolWhip Coolers are very impressive...

 

More to come...