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Monsoon II After we completed our testing with the Big Typhoon, we embarked on the long journey that was installing the Monsoon II. For more details of this installation procedure, see above. We reverted the system settings back to the stock and idle state and commenced testing on the Monsoon II. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() These numbers are not too impressive, showing only about a 4C improvement on the surface of the chip and a 6C improvement on the on-chip diode reading. However, the bigger story here is power consumption. ![]() When comparing the system using a Thermaltake Big Typhoon with the same system using the Monsoon II, at STOCK settings, the power consumption appears to have increased dramatically. This is actually quite alarming, considering we did not expect the TEC to be switched on for much of the time under stock settings. Overclocking the system back to the exact same settings we used with the Big Typhoon, we can see even more interesting results. It seems as though the effectiveness of the Monsoon II increases as temperatures and stresses rise. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The 312W reading is a 77% increase from the stock/idle reading of 176W. That is a HUGE difference. Let us not forget that during the entire test battery, the system’s video card remained in an idle state. Had the video card been under full load on the final tests, power consumption would likely have been very near 400W. For a single video card system, 400W is quite a lot. Now let’s take a look at some graphs showing a direct comparison for temperatures measured when using the two different cooling solutions. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |


















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