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Monday, November 26, 2007
All thermal paste is relatively the same, and as long as you use something between your processor and heatsink (besides a thermal pad) you're good. Or is it?
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Thursday, November 15, 2007
Hmmmm? What is it that I am possibly missing? I know? a powerful power supply. Powering a system of this multitude takes a pretty powerful power supply. Most people would immediately scream out 850 plus watts. If you want the room and power to spare Tuniq has a new power unit just release to the market. The Miniplant is a small power-plant capable of providing a massive 950 watts of power, proving great things can come in small packages.
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Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Here at HardwareLogic we don't play games or use smoke and mirrors to try to make products look good. We push these products to limit and compare them against formidable opponents. We strive to give our readers true results, based on value and performance. Today is no different. We didn't pamper this new compound. we put TX-2 up against the most popular grease company around, Arctic Silver. We will get to this is a head-to-head-to-head match up between Arctic Silver 5, Arctic Silver Lumiere and Tuniq's TX-2 soon enough, but first let's a closer look at TX-2.
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Friday, November 2, 2007
The Tower can't match the awesome Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro for price-performance, and it's generally far cheaper than the Noctua NH-U12 and matches the price of the Thermaltake V1 as well. The Karma Cross on the other hand performs about the same for about £5 less. Even though its performance at the lowest, and quietest speed (the only one I'd run it at) is less than fantastic, I'm still quite impressed. I love the look and style - it's more than a boring square: it's currrrrvyyy. The installation is easy, it should fit any motherboard and far more secure than craptacular plastic push-pins, even if it does require removing the motherboard from the case.
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Thursday, November 1, 2007
One small division of Sunbeam Tech has seen its popularity rise through the proven Tuniq 120 CPU cooler. Now Tuniq wants to expand its UK range with the introduction of a PC chassis and is looking for distributors. But what does the Tuniq 3 offer that might tempt anyone to take it on in this already crowded market? What does the Tuniq 3 budget PC case offer that might tempt any distributor to take it on in the already crowded UK market?
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The average web-surfing, email-checking net slave doesn't think much about thermal paste. Thermal performance probably never enters their mind until they get a whiff of burning silicon, if then. Now, consider your average enthusiast. They probably worry about temps, but not to the extreme of buying branded, high-end thermal paste. Even among the enthusiast community, many are happy with stock cooling. However there is a sub-culture inside our sub-culture. They crave MHz like an addict craves smack. Every single detail of their computer is designed to eek out that little extra fps or to shave off a millisecond rendering time. They route cables, install fans, mod their PC's and even buy fancy thermal compound to get their CPU's a degree Celsius cooler. Today, I'm reviewing Tuniq TX-2 thermal paste. I normally use Arctic Silver 5. Let's see how it stacks up.
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007
The first time I turned my computer on with the TX-2 paste, I noticed that the temperatures were better than they had been with fully 'burnt in' Arctic Silver 5. So it would appear that the TX-2 needs little or no burn in time to reach peak performance. That is no small feat!
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Monday, September 3, 2007
Tuniq launches a new thermal compound that should be available September 10, 2007. We put it to the test against Arctic Silver 5 and the older TX-1 compound to see how easy it is to work with, how easy it cleans up and how well it performs.
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Monday, June 4, 2007
I'm a sucker for a good looking case. Heck, I could write an entire article listing all of the cases I've fallen in love with through the years. Yet, I'm fairly picky when it comes to upgrading my cases. A case pretty much has to have it all before I'll put my components in it: good aesthetics, great features and plenty of room. Today, I'm reviewing the Tuniq 3 from Tuniq, a division of Sunbeamtech. With a 'revolutionary' cooling system, ample room and a beautiful brushed aluminum front panel, the Tuniq 3 could very well find a permanent place in my computer room.
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Monday, April 23, 2007
Ever heard of Tuniq? If so, you probably associate them with their Tower 120 CPU heatsink, but they also make cases, and today take a peek at their new Tuniq 3 enclosure. Can this Sunbeamtech company shine in a crowded case market, or is it lights out for their newest chassis?
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Friday, May 12, 2006
Tuniq may be a division of Sunbeamtech, but with the introduction of arguably one of the best coolers around today, the Tuniq Tower 120, they have set themselves apart from the rest. The Tower 120 was put up against the likes of the Thermalright XP120, Thermaltake Big Typhoon, Zalman 9500 and countless others on many review sites and came out on top in some of the cases. But can their latest tower, the Tuniq 2 have the same effect as well? We shall see...
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Thursday, August 25, 2005
For their first release of a CPU cooler, Tuniq have a real winner here. It is unique with the integration of a standard size fan in the middle of the cooler. 120mm fan means good airflow at low speeds, and even at high speed it is not as bad as a lot of smaller fans which need high RPM's. Installation was easy for the size of the unit thanks to the attention to detail - the thumbscrews and the space to see what you are doing when the fan was removed. For those of you with windowed case, just add a LED fan for a bit of lighting effect...
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