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Review: Thermaltake Soprano DX

by Matt Davey on 4 July 2007, 08:34

Tags: Thermaltake (3540.TWO)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaivd

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Thermal performance


Our thermal tests use some of the hottest hardware to come available in recent years, with stress being applied by burn-in tests from the popular SiSoft Sandra Pro application.

The Soprano DX was fitted with the following hardware:

HEXUS chassis - test-equipment specification
Motherboard Intel D975XBX
Processor Intel Pentium Extreme Edition 840 (3.2GHz, Smithfield core)
CPU cooler Intel stock CPU cooler
Memory 2GiB (2 x 1GiB) OCZ DDR2 PC4200 Value Pro Dual-Channel
Graphic card ASUSTeK GeForce 6800 256MiB Ultra PCIe
Power supply Corsair HX620W
Hard drive Seagate Barracuda 160GB SATA2
Optical drive Pioneer 110 DVD re-writer


Thermaltake Soprano DX

The DX didn't do too well in the thermal tests. A lack of airflow around the centre of the case produced a five-degree swing under load. And, under load, the temperature of the CPU and motherboard also increased beyond our expectations.

Disappointingly, although the rear exhaust did seem to be pushing out a fair amount of heat, there must have been a lot more inside that it just wasn't extracting.

It's possible that removal of the HDD cradle – with or without using a long graphics card - would improve the system thermals overall, since that would produce a clear path from the front fan. But it really shouldn't be necessary to take such drastic action.