Friday May 25, 2012 11:20 AM AEST

Thermalright Silver Arrow goes *twang*

By Justin Robinson
13:03 Dec 7, 2010 | 5 Comments
Tags: Thermalright | Silver | Arrow | cooling | fans
Thermalright Silver Arrow goes *twang*
 
82
Verdict:
Quiet, though a messy install procedure and compatibility limit this heatsink.
 
---

Thermalright take two heatsinks and jam them together to make this beast. But is it cool enough?

 

We’re big fans of cooling gear at Atomic, and Thermalright heatsinks have been a mainstay in the Labs for quite some time. Their TRUE reigned at the top of the roost for many years with only a slight refresh, but Thermalright appear to think that the only way to improve – is to double.

This ethos results in the Silver Arrow, a gigantic monster heatsink that is closer to two heatsinks, fused into one. Taking the shape of a U, four 8mm heatpipes run from tip to tip, dipping down at the centre to mate with a nickel-plated copper base. Heat is pulled up through the aluminium fins, and the two included vibration-dampened fans dissipate the thermal energy. The fans might not be our favourite colour, resembling a mix of dull grey and pasty green snot, but they generate only 56dBA each and are nigh-unnoticeable in a case.

Unfortunately the deviation in form factor away from the TRUE affects installation, which we can only describe as ‘involved’. It starts with a backplate and motherboard mounting ring, secured with spacers inbetween, to which the heatsink is mounted, then screwed down to the ring with a bar that passes above the nickel-plated base. It’s then tensioned with an included custom tool, and the fans are added with clips and anti-vibration pads, where finally it’s complete – not exactly intuitive.

Thermal performance isn’t as stellar as we’d hoped it would be, with the heatsink performing slightly worse at load than the CoolIT Eco in our high-load overclocked torture tests. Re-mounting didn’t improve this somewhat average showing, nor did tensioning at various levels, though to its credit the noise level remained static throughout.

It’s a decent choice for cooling, but due to its awkward installation process, immense size that makes motherboard choice a problem, and merely good performance, we suggest you look towards other high-end tower heatsinks.

 
Product Info
Specs:
Dual tower heatsink; dual 140mm fans; 1366, 1156, 775, AM2, AM3; 825g
Supplier:
Price when reviewed:
105
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5 Comments
wayke
Dec 7, 2010 1:55 PM
How far off the Board does that stickout
qwakqwak
Dec 7, 2010 2:22 PM
It can't be taller than the Thor's hammer I have in my case, nearly touches the window of my Antec 900... Best cooler I've ever had though.
fliptopia
Dec 7, 2010 9:45 PM
I dunno, I have the Cogage Arrow in a RV02 case and it's pretty close to the side. It also interferes with on of the ram slots, due to it's immensity.
Boosta
Dec 8, 2010 6:44 AM
I found it depends where the slot is on your motherboard. I couldn't use this heatsink with my x-48 board in my p182 case, but it fits alright in my RV01.

I found it to be an average heatsink, not much better at all than a noctua u12p with one fan.

And like Justin said, installation can be a downright bastard.
osama_bin_athlon
Dec 8, 2010 12:39 PM
what a disappointment, I was expecting much better temps out of the successor to the TRUE.
the Megahalems that I'm using now has to have the fan removed, to slide out the m'board tray, (SilverStone TJ10) with the TRUE that I had prior, it wasn't possible to slide it out - even with the coolermaster V8 that I had before the TRUE, I had to remove the plastic top of the heatsink, and then it'd just foul the case, making it very iffy to slide out the tray.
there's plenty of room inside - there's 1" to spare between the HS&F and the side of the case/window.
stupid oversized heatsinks!
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Issue: 137 | June, 2012

Atomic is a magazine aimed squarely at computer enthusiasts, gamers, and serious PC upgraders.

Every month we bring you the latest reviews of new technology and PC components, in depth features on everything from overclocking to console hacking, and gaming previews and interviews.
 
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