RAIJINTEK PALLAS, High-End Low Profile CPU Cooler, 6pcs 6mm Heat-Pipe, Slim 14013 PWM Fan, Fully Nickel Plating, Copper Base, Total 68mm Heigth…
₹2,495.00
RAIJINTEK PALLAS
A low profile, high-efficiency CPU air cooler ideal for use in HTPC, ITX PC, and other compact systems. With copper base, six Φ6mm heat pipes, and dense fins plus a 140 mm PWM fan above, the PALLAS is designed, by German engineers, to unleash the full potential of the latest Intel / AMD processors even in tight space. While its copper mirror base and heatsink nickel plating present both form and function.
No more tough decision when it comes to choosing a fit cooler for your next small powerhouse.
- 140mm Low profile cooler – total height of 68mm with 14013 PWM fan included
- Specially designed for most desktop systems, especially low profile systems
- Patented copper mirror base and full heat-sink nickel plating
- Enhanced airflow and surface for heat dissipation
- 6pcs powerful 6mm heat-pipes
- Super slim and powerful 14013 PWM fan with silent noise level
- Supports Intel & AMD modern CPU sockets and platforms
- Intel socket LGA 775/115x/1366/201x CPU (Core i3 / i5 / i7 CPU) and AMD Socket AM4/AM3+/AM3/AM2+/AM2/FM2+/FM2/FM1 CPU
,
Specification: RAIJINTEK PALLAS, High-End Low Profile CPU Cooler, 6pcs 6mm Heat-Pipe, Slim 14013 PWM Fan, Fully Nickel Plating, Copper Base, Total 68mm Heigth…
|
3 reviews for RAIJINTEK PALLAS, High-End Low Profile CPU Cooler, 6pcs 6mm Heat-Pipe, Slim 14013 PWM Fan, Fully Nickel Plating, Copper Base, Total 68mm Heigth…
Add a review
₹2,495.00
Matthew H. –
Pros: Dropped CPU temp down a whopping 18 degrees Celsius from the stock cooler. Blows down on the RAM, dropping their temps 7 degrees compared to having heatsinks on the RAM. Giant fan spins slow and is completely silent. The block is so big, you might could go fanless if you have enough case airflow. Cons: Had to remove all the RAM heatsinks to make it fit. (Use a blow dryer or heat gun, else you’ll break them or pull the modules off the RAM PCB) THE FAN CLIPS…! What an awful design. Just use zip ties, because even if you can get the fan clipped to the heatsink (and I doubt you can), the clips hang out even further and TOUCH the GPU. So unless you have a GPU backplate, it’s gonna short out your graphics card. There really is no other option than zip ties for the fan. Last thing, the heatsink is so big it also pushes against the 24-pin motherboard connector, as well as the front USB header next to it, which is now leaning so far I was afraid it wouldn’t work. Overall Review: This is amazing at COOLING. But the installation is a pain the neck. Once you get it up and running, it’s a huge improvement over stock. This experience was on an MSI Micro-ATX board using a 9th gen Intel Core-i5 compared to Intel stock cooler. CPU went from 68C on stock to 50C maximum stressing CPU and GPU simultaneously for 10 minutes.
Matt Z. –
Pros: – Low height, fits in smaller cases – Effective cooler – Quiet fan – Maintains a decent max temp for a low profile HSF Cons: – Will not fit all motherboards – Will not work with RAM modules with tall heat spreaders (pretty much anything above the actual PCB) – Fan clipping system is challenging and adds extra width to the unit Overall Review: You had best measure before buying. If you’re installing in a functioning system, you will need to remove the motherboard if your case does not allow you access to the backside of the CPU Socket. Orientating this was a bit of a challenge as I have a small case and my memory has heat spreaders. I was able to situate this with the heat pipes going to the back of the case. But I barely cleared the I/O ports on the back of the motherboard. Attaching the fan with clips meant I had to put some cushions on the back of my GFX card due to contact. My mATX (MSI H97M-E35) board only has 1 PCIE slot, so the card had to remain. The fan pictured on the box and in the product images is not the fan that is received. I’d recommend either including the pictures fan or changing the product packaging/listings to show a black fan. Even though nobody can see this in my case, others may want to show this off with a case window and will be upset they got a boring, black fan. This also presents a chance for Raijintek to address whether or not someone paid for a fancy red/white fan and got a cheaper all black fan. If you need an effective low profile HSF and you can accommodate this in your build, I would recommend this. Just as long as you were do not care about the fan being black. If this is part of a clean build with a color scheme, this is not what you are looking for. ************************************* Below is a comparison of a stock Intel, Thermaltake, and this Raijintek HSF on an i7-4790S: Temps – Stock Intel HSF for reference Package: 34 – 85 Core #0: 39 – 93 Core #1: 39 – 93 Core #2: 38 – 86 Core #3: 40 – 86 Temps – Thermaltake Silent Contact 12 Package: 32 – 48 Core #0: 36 – 55 Core #1: 35 – 57 Core #2: 35 – 52 Core #3: 37 – 54 Temps – Raijintek Pacage/Core: Min – Max Package: 34 – 56 Core #0: 39 – 63 Core #1: 38 – 64 Core #2: 38 – 59 Core #3: 38 – 60
A M. –
Pros: Designed to fit in slim SFF cases. Runs quietly. Can be mounted on almost any Intel or AMD cpu from the last 10 years. Effective cooling for up to about 95-watt cpu. Reasonable cost. Cons: Fan clips are fiddly to attach. The fan itself is all black, not red and white as pictured here on the product page. Won’t fit over tall RAM modules, but we know that about low profile coolers, don’t we? Overall Review: Installed this in our HTPC on an Intel Core i5-4590 which had been cooled by a Noctua down-firing cooler. Depending on which direction you orient the cooling fins the fan will also cool either the voltage regulators or the RAM memory modules. Since the i5-4590 doesn’t offer overclocking there’s no benefit to having extra cooling of the voltage regulators; thus, I oriented the cooler to sit above the RAM. We use low profile RAM so there’s no problem of RAM heatsinks interfering with the cooler. There’s plenty of air flow over the memory so you could remove tall RAM heatsinks and have “active” cooling for them instead. I predict you’re not going to like the fan clips much because they are tricky to clip on properly. At idle, the Raijintek Pallas kept the cpu within 2 degrees of what the Noctua had done before. Under load, the cpu was 3 to 4 degrees warmer using the Raijintek than it was with the Noctua. Even so, it never went above 64 C. Bearing in mind that the Raijintek is over 60% cheaper than the Noctua, I’d say this Pallas cooler is good value even if doesn’t have the advertised red/white fan. It does run almost silent most of the time so it’s a good choice for small cases and home theater use, but you can forget using it if you plan to overclock the cpu.