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Cooler Master V8 Cooler Review – revisited

Today we are going to test the Cooler Master V8 with both Intel Core i7 980x Processor and the AMD 1100T Black Edition. Both of the highest end models from the respective companies.

While we could use an open test bench, we like to try and mirror more ‘realistic’ conditions, so we are mounting the systems inside several Thermaltake Level 10 Chassis. Room ambient temperatures are maintained at a steady 20c throughout testing. We use diodes to measure core temperatures.

AMD System:
Processor: Phenom II X6 1100T
Motherboard: Asus Crosshair IV Formula
Thermal Paste: Noctua NT H1
Power Supply: Corsair AX850W
Chassis: Thermaltake Level 10
Memory: GSkill RipJaws DDR3 2133mhz 4GB 7-10-7
Graphics Card: Nvidia GTX460

Intel System:
Processor: Intel Core i7 980x
Motherboard: Asus Rampage III Extreme
Thermal Paste: Noctua NT H1
Power Supply: Corsair AX1200W
Chassis: Thermaltake Level 10
Memory: GSkill RipJaws DDR3 2000mhz 6GB 7-8-7
Graphics Card: Nvidia GTX460

Comparison coolers:
Noctua NH D14
Noctua NH C14
Thermaltake Frio
Thermaltake Contac29
Xigmatek DK-S1283
OCZ Vendetta 2
Coolermaster Hyper 212 Plus

First we will have a look at the temperatures at reference speeds and voltages. Fan speeds were set at a mid way point, to balance noise and cooling performance. Highest fan speeds will be irritating for many people, but more on this later.

The Cooler Master V8 falls in behind the Noctua NH C14 with dual fans.

Next we want to overclock the 1100T to 4.1ghz with 1.52 volts.

The D14 holds onto the lead as we would expect, with the Frio following in second place with a two degree differential. The Cooler Master V8 is slightly outperformed by the Noctua NH C14 again under load, but not by a significant margin.

Now onto the Intel 980x testing, first with reference speeds and voltages.

A similar result curve as the AMD testing, with the C14 slightly outperforming the V8.

Now we want to overclock the Intel Core i7 970 to 4.2ghz and increase the voltage to 1.42.

The Cooler Master V8, even for an ageing design holds onto the shirttails of the modern NH C14, falling behind by around a single degree celcius.

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8 comments

  1. I have had one of these for a year now and its still great. recommended.

  2. Still looks good too. I never liked their highest end one, it takes up basically a full case !

  3. I always meant to pick one of these up, but opted for the noctua a year later. Still looks nice and it gives more room over the motherboard. That is why I dislike the D14. it just hogs all the space and makes adjustments to a system a nightmare.

  4. quite surprised to see this being reviewed so long after it was released, but after reading it, its was good to see the performance of the new coolers gainst it. they have a bit of a task outperforming the D14, not unless they make the size much larger.

  5. Frio seems the better deal to me, pricing is very similar and its a newer cooler. bit interesting to see what Cooler Master come up with.

  6. This was always a great cooler, and I think their new version should be really smoking, if they dont make it too big like the V10.

  7. nice to see this cooler again, was always a good product from cooler master, probably why they let its life span run so long.

    look forward to seeing the new version, whatever it might be.

  8. I’m using hyper 212 plus, performance is good, but I don’t like its fan, when ever CPU usage spikes, the fan follows.