ThermalRight AXP-100 review

A low-profile cooler with some tower coolers in its sights

ThermalRight AXP-100
ThermalRight AXP-100

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Six heatpipe design

  • +

    Small form factor perfect for HTPC builds

  • +

    Good cooling performance at load

Cons

  • -

    Not one for overclocking

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The current crop of mini-ITX mobos, with their full-spec desktop chipsets, are just the job for building a powerful HTPC. There's a multitude of small, compact cases around to build them into, but there is a snag - how do you keep the CPU cool in a confined space?

Nine times out of 10 this means using a tower CPU cooler, which is great for keeping a CPU chilled, but not so good if you want to use as small a case as possible. Enter Thermalright and its AXP-100 compact top cooler.

Compact chiller

The AXP-100 doesn't make a bad fist of keeping stock speed CPUs cool. Using it on our test i7 3770K, it kept the CPU temperature to a reasonable 35°C. That's not quite as cool as some of the tower coolers we've tested, but when the CPU was pushed to 100 per cent the AXP-100 actually cooled better than some chunkier models. That came as a welcome surprise - generally tower coolers comfortably out perform their top-cooled brethren.

Benchmarks

Idle CPU performance
3770K @ 3.5GHz: Degrees centigrade: Lower is better

THERMALRIGHT AXP-100: 35
NOCTUA NH-L9I: 35
REEVEN KELVEROS RC-1202: 26

100% CPU performance
3770K @ 3.5GHz: Degrees centigrade: Lower is better

THERMALRIGHT AXP-100: 68
NOCTUA NH-L9I: 76
REEVEN KELVEROS RC-1202: 69

Peak to idle performance
3770K @ 3.5GHz: Seconds: Faster is better

THERMALRIGHT AXP-100: 86
NOCTUA NH-L9I: 145
REEVEN KELVEROS RC-1202: 187

Inevitably, that flipped around with the processor overclocked. The AXP-100 managed to get within a few degrees of a bunch of tower coolers in idle mode, but when it came to running the overclocked CPU at 100 per cent, the AXP-100 cried foul, shot to over 100°C within a minute, and the testing had to be halted for the sake of our poor stressed-out silicon.

To see a cooler as compact as this using a six-heatpipe design is quite an eye-opener. It works well at stock speeds and is very quiet. It's also small enough in profile to be fitted in some very compact places, and while it isn't one for the overclocking brigade (it just can't handle it), if you're building a compact HTPC system, this excellent little cooler should be at the top of your build list.