About this deal
I like ITX cases, and while they often are space-constrained, some do allow for decently sized air coolers (like the NR200). The AK620 is capped on each cooling tower with a pair of decorative cap plates featuring a simplified DeepCool logo nestled in each corner, on a pixel-like backdrop. Whether you're an overclocking enthusiast or simply want to ensure that your CPU runs at optimal temperature, this cooler has you covered. The crystal-clear digital screen displays the system's real-time temperature and CPU utilization, and warns of over-temperature. The results didn’t change much at all with the longer test: The average clock speeds maintained dropped by 29 MHz on DeepCool’s LT720 and 31 MHz on Thermalright’s Assassin X 120 R SE.
This means you can't use this for rotated motherboards (ie: Thermaltake Tower 100), or horizontally placed motherboards.
Everything you loved about the AK620 ZERO DARK combined with a slim, magnetic status display and A-RGB LED strips. Two powerful PWM fans with superior fluid dynamic bearings provide silent operation without sacrificing cooling performance for a perfect balance. The six, nickel plated pipes of the AK620 cooler collect between the fixed mounting plate and the cooler cold plate.
Minor points: it should be made clear that the digital display requires that you have an empty usb 2. The same high-quality materials with six advanced copper heat pipes, a pure copper baseplate, a dense dual-tower heatsink and two silent FDB fans result in a powerful winning formula for high-performance cooling in the ZERO DARK raven design. This model features the same premium design of DeepCool’s AK620 Zero Dark, but features an innovative addition: a digital display embedded in the top that showcases both CPU temperature and utilization statistics. The AK620 DIGITAL provides maximum heat dissipation and improved airflow to reduce temperatures in demanding system applications. Tom's Hardware is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher.We’ll take a closer look at three such technologies that fall under the headings of Centrino, Viiv, and vPro, respectively.