Zalman VF1000 LED Video Card Cooler Review

Cooling/VGA & Other Cooling by geoffrey @ 2007-10-22

Zalman is an industry pioneer when it comes down to cooling heated computer electronics, affecting the total system temperature and noise level in a design-friendly solution has been their marketing strategy for few years now. Their latest product is the Zalman VF1000 LED, a dual slot heatsink/fan video card cooling device with high compatibility in mind, a perfect challenge for 2007´s most popular video card the NVIDIA´s 8800 GTS. Curious? Read on.

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Introduction

Introduction

Madshrimps (c)


Zalman is an industry pioneer when it comes down to cooling heated computer electronics, affecting the total system temperature and noise level in a design-friendly solution has been their marketing strategy for few years now. Their latest product is the Zalman VF1000 LED, a dual slot heatsink/fan video card cooling device with high compatibility in mind, a perfect challenge for 2007's most popular video card the NVIDIA's 8800GTS. Sneak peak:

Madshrimps (c)


The 8800 family has been brought on the after market exactly one year ago, though since the very beginning we didn't found too many manufacturers actually trying to serve better GPU cooling solutions, in fact we had to wait for the popular 8800GTS 320MB to show up early 2007 before anyone even bothered to improve the reference cooling device. Other manufacturers have passed our labs before but it was only recently when Zalman equipped us with their latest GPU heatsink/fan product, we were glad to have a look at Zalman's latest product and add it too our increasing 8800 air cooling charts.

In our today's article we'll be testing how the VF1000 LED handles the 8800GTS heat output and see how it can combine low temperatures with an acceptable noise level. Those same tests were repeated with competing products, here is a line-up:

  • Stock NVIDIA 8800GTS heatsink
  • ThermalRight HR-03 Plus with custom fan
  • MACS M-Sorceress II MA-8280-2
  • Zalman VF1000 LED

    Our test setup consists out of the following components:

    Test setup

    Geoffreys' Test Setup
    Madshrimps (c)
    CPUIntel E6600 @ 3GHz
    CoolingZalman 9700 LED
    MainbordAbit Fatal1ty FP-IN9 SLI
    Memory2x1Gb TEAMGROUP Xtreem 800MHz 4-4-4-10-35-4-10-10-10-2T
    GraphicsSparkle 8800GTS 320MB
    Other
  • FSP Epsilon 900 PSU
  • Maxtor 80Gb PATA HDD
  • Seagate 200GB SATA HDD
  • Antec Nine Hundred housing
  • 20" Dell UltraSharp 2007FP TFT monitor


  • The Intel E6600 was being overclocked to 3GHz by changing the FSB from 266MHz to 333MHz and by keeping the multiplier at default (9). This way the CPU would score on par with the Intel E6850 based on the popular G0 stepping.
  • Teamgroup's pair of 1Gb DDR2 sticks were clocked to default settings via the NVIDIA 650i chipset.
  • ForceWare 163.44 drivers
  • While Windows Vista is now officially launched, we decided to test with a mature Windows OS (XP SP2), even if we wanted to, the lack of decent working NVIDIA drivers for Vista keeps us from testing on the new platform.

    Benchmark methodology

    The tests/benchmarks were completed with the Geforce 8800GTS at stock speeds and stock voltage levels. In order to obtain decent and reliable results we loaded the 8800GTS for exact 30 minutes and logged the maximum GPU core temperature using Rivatuner. System 'IDLE' temperatures were obtained by letting the system stand untouched for another 30 minutes. We also logged the test-room air temperature and recalculated the GPU temperature by adding/subtracting the differential air temperature. This means that we can now make a clear chart which does not only represent how good/bad a product can perform ("product A is x times better then product B"), but also shows you where our results are placed in real-life environments ("product A & B performed good/average/bad with our test setup, temperatures were...")

    Let's head on to our today’s product ->
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    Comment from blind_ripper @ 2007/10/22
    will it fit 2900's ? i dont read any thing about it in the review!
    Comment from jmke @ 2007/10/22
    Nope

    ATI X1600 Series
    ATI X1300 Series
    ATI Radeon 9*** Series (except 9550/9600)
    ATI Radeon X*** Series
    NVIDIA Geforce4 MX Series
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5200
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5500
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5600(FX 5700)
    NVIDIA Geforce 6600 Series (except 6600 AGP Series)
    NVIDIA Geforce4 TI 4 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5700(Ultra) Series
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5800 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 6600 Series (except 6600 AGP Series)
    ATI X1650 Series
    ATI X1600 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 8600 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 8500 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7600 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7300 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 6600 Series (except 6600 AGP Series)
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5900 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce FX 5950 Series
    ATI X1950 Series, ATI X1900 Series
    ATI X1800 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7950 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7900 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7600 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 7800 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 6800 Series
    NVIDIA Geforce 8800 Series

    http://www.zalman.co.kr/eng/product/...x=289&code=013
    Comment from geoffrey @ 2007/10/22
    Page 3 talks about the installation procedure and compatibility

     

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