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Reviews Around The Web
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
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Wednesday, March 25, 2009
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Today we have the Fenrir, the first 120mm tower style cooler from Titan, as their main listing of coolers shows they normally submit coolers with a fan on top blowing towards the motherboard. While this concept and style of cooler has been done before, this is Titan's first attempt to introduce a said style cooler to the market. Not personally having tested Titans products myself, at this point I don?t have any idea what to expect in the performance or build quality of Titan, but we will soon get to those aspects.
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In this review Frostytech is testing the new Titan TTC-NK85TZ Fenrir heatsink, a good CPU cooler from a manufacturer which has had a spotty past. If you can find the Titan TTC-NK85TZ Fenrir you'll find it equivalent to models like the Sunbeam Core-contact freezer. Like many tower heatsinks, the TTC-NK85TZ Fenrir heatsink has four exposed 8mm diameter direct contact heatpipes at the base. Weighing it at roughly 550grams, the TTC-NK85TZ Fenrir is compatible with both Intel socket 775, 1366 and the entire family of AMD socket 939 to AM2+ processors.
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Wednesday, February 25, 2009
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The Titan Fenrir CPU Heatsink arrived Technic3D. Compatible with Intel LGA 775/1366 and AMD K8/AM2. PWM 120mm Fan and Heat Pipe Direct Touch make this Heatsink better than other High-End Cooler? See you in the following Review the Fenrir with 4 Heatpipes compared with the Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme True Copper, Scythe Mugen2 and Standard Boxed Cooling on a Intel Core i7 920.
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Thursday, November 13, 2008
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Titan's Cool Idol heatsink is
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Thursday, November 6, 2008
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Titan are one of the oldest co
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Wednesday, April 9, 2008
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While graphics card chipset architecture and efficiency continues to advance, the continual increase of core frequencies and power consumption makes the development of third party GPU coolers a good investment for the discerning enthusiast. Until a couple of years ago these coolers where only sought after by overclockers who required lower temperatures in order to push their hardware to the limits, but today even the educated public are aware of the benefits. The mid range graphics card sector tends to have some relatively poor cooler design as well as small, noisy fan configurations so with this in mind today we will take a look at a very large VGA cooler by Titan, the Twin Turbo CSC88TZ. Despite its massive size and twin fan design, the Twin Turbo is designed for installation only on low to mid range VGA cards.
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Sunday, March 16, 2008
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Titan release a new HDD cooler into the market promising reductions in noise and temperatue of your drive. We see if it lives up to it's claims.
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Friday, October 12, 2007
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I had high expectations of Titan, especially after the previous G4T turned out to be a decent notebook cooler supporting a wide range of laptops. However, the G5T is less of a notebook cooler, and more just a pair of budget USB speakers. Trying to label this as a notebook cooler seems a bit weird, as it doesn't provide any airflow of its own. Even as a pair of USB speakers, it doesn't provide too much incentive for the end-user.
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Tuesday, October 9, 2007
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I must say that I enjoyed the EZ Sound's performance. For a set of small portable speakers, I expected it to sound "like a tin can" but I was pleasantly surprised. The subwoofer is not the best but it does provide a certain depth to the bass that I don't get even from a set of regular 2.0 speakers. Aesthetically, Titan has done a great job with the design to make it sleek; also, the white color will make the EZ Sound match well with iPods.
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Tuesday, October 2, 2007
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Over the last few years, consumers have been inundated with cooling solutions for their notebook PCs. Most are pretty gimmicky, but others actually have some scientific method that will help cool the hottest laptops and keep them running more efficiently and hopefully, more quietly. Today, we have the Titan TTC-G5T Extendable Notebook Cooling Pad speakers on our test bench. This device's mission in life is simple - to give users a better sound solution than their notebook offers and at the same time raise it up off the desk to let more cool air flow underneath. We are going to challenge this claim and see if this product's capabilities have any merit.
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Thursday, June 28, 2007
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As users demand the same performance from notebook computers as they get from their desktop, manufacturers are finding that it's getting tougher and tougher to design a cool running computer. NVIDIA now offers some very high-end graphics to notebook builders, which makes the task that much more difficult. This opens a new segment of the market up to manufacturers willing to provide aftermarket notebook cooling solutions. In this article Benchmark Reviews evaluates just how well the Titan G4T Magic Pad cools overheated notebooks.
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Tuesday, June 26, 2007
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The new Graphics Card Heatsink from Titan,the Twin Turbo, arrived Technic3D. Silent and very good cooling characteristics with Heatpipe? See you in the following Review with a MSI NVIDIA 6600 GT.
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Wednesday, May 23, 2007
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Titan Amanda is a new cooler based on a little TEC (40W). At the beginning we felt something strange hearing that this cpu cooler used an air-cooled peltier cell to improve its performances. This time Titan understood the limit of this tecnology: a little TEC isn't able to cool our processor if left alone in this heavy task! This the reason why Amanda joins two traditional technologies, TEC and Air Cooling, by the use of four heatpipes: a pair of them cools the cpu, the other pair cools the TEC chip which improves heat transfer from the cpu to the fins. Of course there are some compromises: Amanda weight over one kilo and it introduces addictional power consumption, around 60-70Watts under full stress. However, performances are similar to watercooling kits and much more better than 'industrial' watercooling kit, while noise level and price (around $100) are lower: this hybrid solution brought from Titan to us could be a good choice if we're looking for performances.
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Wednesday, March 28, 2007
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The Titan EZ-Sound Mini 2.1 Speakers arrived Technic3D. Good Sound with very small chassis? Technic3D will hear that in the following Review.
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Thursday, March 15, 2007
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They sent us over a set of their new EZ Sound 2.1 speaker systems. There are a variety of companies producing 2.1 setups, so you may ask what could make these any different. Well here's the thing, these little speakers are the world's smallest 2.1 capable speakers. So, this means that you will no longer have to carry around a larger mobile setup (despite how good we might well look with a pimped out ghetto-blaster - Ed) or listen to your favorite music through some dinky built-in speakers. But the question remains, how do they sound? Lets find out how good the EZ Sound 2.1 speaker system really is.
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