Review : Cooler Master Cryofuze Violet

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Results:

Our thermal paste test protocol is very young, it is based on an Intel Alderlake platform with an I9-12900KS and an EVGA Z690 DARK KINGPIN. The tests are performed under the same conditions with a Heatkiller IV waterblock at constant pressure.

Protocol:

The I9 12900KS is set to get 250W of load on cinebench R20. The Pcore are at 5200MHz, the Ecore at 4000MHz and the cache at 4400MHz for a voltage of 1,335V bios LLC +25%. Thermal paste applications are done crosswise on the CPU, this is the method that works best with all thermal pastes on the market. The waterblock is mounted and tightened to the screw stop to let the springs apply the right pressure. Cooler Master Cryofuze Violet application Then, a cinebench R23 stress test is run to warm up the thermal paste with 10min of heavy load. To finish, three R20 cinebench are launched in a row. While taking well into account to have the same water temperature between each beginning of benchmark. Each thermal paste is applied three times with three cinebench R20 per application. The minimum delta T° value between the water and the CPU is recorded among these nine measurements.

Results:

As we can see, this Cryofuze Violet is ahead of the Arctic MX4 or KFA² TG-002. This one performs quite well even if we had hoped for better performance considering its technical sheet. We regret not having enough paste left to make a comparison on a graphics card, a very different use than on a CPU.

The measurements were made with water at 27-29°C and a flow rate of 235L/h. Here are the details of the best measurements out of nine readings per thermal paste. Cooler Master Cryofuze Violet R20 Cooler Master Cryofuze Violet R23