NorsemanNorseman
UPS had just left and I unboxed my Phanteks PH TC14PE. I must have sat there 10 minutes just looking it over. This thing is a work of art. Beautiful. It is very well made. Tight manufacturing tolerances and an unblemished Blue finish. Packed like it was glass, in it's factory box. You hardly know where to grab it to get it out. I had watched the youtube videos on installation and was pretty sure of my actions, but you always come across a part or piece that stumps you. So I grab the instructions from the box, Looked over both sides , It slowly dawned on me ..I don't speak either of these languages.(?) My wife seeing my puzzled look reached into the box and handed me another one and said " Here try this one it's in "English and British" Again I get the puzzled look (?) I thought they were the same? She just laughed and walked away. Duh! She got me. But, the Phanteks comes with 2 boxes full of hardware. Everything you could ever possibly need, except a long screw driver.. One is marked AMD the other Intel. And some generic parts for both. As for the Intel stuff, (?) I know nothing. My last Intel was a 100mhz Pentium..a looong time ago. But, the AMD stuff was simple. It uses the standard AMD back plate. Watch the youtube video, it's great...and one is on the AM3+ motherboard. I have yet to punish my new FX-8350 to see what she will do. But I can tell you the temps look really good and it is silent. Unlike the Corsair A-70 it replaced. I only had a chance to run "Heaven" Bench mark at max everything before I went to work,I did run Prime 95 for the 32M setting but it was so quick there wasn't any temp rise. Watching "hardware Monitor" I saw that it did spin up for startup, but it is so quiet I never heard it. I opened the case door..Nope, still can't hear it. I used all the cables, the 2 to 1 splitter and the very long cables that come on the fans. Some have said the long cables are a problem, but I found I could lay the fans on the HDD cage and plug the 4 pin into the CPU header then as I mounted them on the cooler push the extra cable into the slot at the top of my case and into the cable management area behind the motherboard, so..I like the long cables. Mounting was easy. remove the AMD clips, put 4 screws to the old back plate (with spacers and bracket)plug in cpu fan, put cooler in place /with paste, 2 screw nuts to mount cooler. Put the fans on and DONE! I did use the diamond based Thermal Paste that came with the cooler. My FIRST time away from AS-5. We will see. I'll be back to update as soon as I get a day off to test better.So far...I really like it. It is LARGE, no doubt. It fit over my Corsair Low Profile ram no problem. Inside my Corsair 600t Case..plenty of room. Even enough to leave the Bitfenix 230mm Pro on the side case door. I did read reviews for about 3 weeks, before I chose this cooler. It is either 1st 2nd or 3rd (back and forth) But very close both ways with the Noctua, and Silver Arrow Extreme. I think variance in installations perhaps. That was good enough for me to pick on æsthetics. This cooler is beautiful! The "other" selling point is "It's one of the Top Three" CPU Air coolers in the world. I was sold..and still am.Very happy with this cooler.I will post photos.Note: Installed, Measuring from the face of the motherboard, to the top of the fins is 6 3/4 ".Upgraded case to Corsair Obsidian 900D in Oct. 2013Update: Oct. 26th 2013, Optimized air flow and put Phanteks 140mm's as case fans.FX-8350 on AMD "STRESS Test", Temps 51C all 8 cores at 4.5ghz, after 20 minutes.With room temp of 23C.Great CPU cooler, Highly recommended!Update2: OC'd FX-8350 to 4.7ghz with CPU temp at 53C during 8 core stress test after 25 minutes.
LolI'mNotTellingYouMyName
This product cools adequately...for the most part. When at 100% use I need to direct my floor fan at the computer in an attempt to cool it down. But that's not too out of the ordinary. However as compared to a similar product which I will not mention because I am not a shill for them, it cools MAYBE 1-2 degrees Celsius. Which is a fairly significant improvement for a power user such as myself, however for an average user a cheaper alternative of relatively similar strength will probably work just as well.One REALLY BIG PROBLEM with this heatsink is the fact it juts DIRECTLY TOWARD the RAM. You may be wondering why I care. Well, for some models of motherboard (and, frankly, I'd argue the good majority of motherboards, though I've used few motherboards in my time building/tinkering with computers) the RAM is REAAAALY close to the CPU seat, which makes installing this thing REALLY, REALLY, RE. EALLY HARD. I'm not sure I can stress that enough. My main problem was getting it screwed to the back. Trying to fit my big sausage mitts down there with it so close to everything was a challenge to say the least. I also scratched up my hands pretty bad. Not hospital worthy, but worthy enough to note.Otherwise, again, it's alright.
Mister BMister B
The PH-TC14PE is an outstanding cooler. My system has a Core i7-6700K overclocked to 4.7GHz. Even under the most tortuous load (like the small FFT test in Prime 95) and using a very gentle, quiet fan curve that only hits 100% when the CPU core reaches 85C, the CPU never even hits 80C—usually in the 72-75C range. This thing is the real deal. Under a much more typical load like playing a game, the CPU cores never get over 65C and the fans never even hit 1000RPM.The fans are 140-mm spinners, but the mounting holes make them compatible with 120-mm fans. If you want to add an additional fan, the clips are included, but keep that in mind when ordering a fan. It's not that unusual. Models from Cryorig and Noctua have the same hybrid mounting spots.Installation is not very difficult and not too bad to do while in a case (in my case, a Fractal Design Define R5). For Intel systems anyway, there's an X-bracket, some through-motherboard bolts, and a pair of bracket arms. Once that's on, apply thermal paste and set the cooler on and screw down two spring-loaded screws. Then snap on the fans and you're set. I think it'd actually be harder to install out of the case because of the cooler's size. I can already see I have to take it off to remove the motherboard because it's blocking at least one of the mounting holes.I've included a photo of the cooler mounted on my motherboard. Note that if your motherboard has the graphics card PCIe x16 slot in the top position, this cooler probably won't fit. I won't even be able to install an M.2 drive unless I remove the graphics card, at the very least, and it completely covers all four DIMM slots. It's just mind-boggling. But it's so awesome. If you have the room to spare in your case, the PH-TC14PE is among the quietest and best-performing CPU coolers you can get.