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In a bid to offer performance enthusiasts better memory solutions, OCZ Technology has unveiled its new eXtreme thermal convection (XTC) memory cooler that is designed to actively cool-down memory modules functioning at high frequencies. With the announcement OCZ places itself next to Corsair, who already provides active cooling for memory modules.

“To address the requirements of extreme overclockers OCZ is releasing the new XTC cooler which is designed to pair up with the Xtreme Thermal Convection heat-spreaders utilized on our entire lineup of premium memory solutions,” said Alex Mei, vice president of marketing at OCZ Technology Group.

OCZ’s XTC memory cooler is made of aluminum, has two 60mm fans and is designed to be compatible with both DDR and DDR2 memory modules. The XTC cooler attaches to motherboard’s DIMM socket retention levers and flow the air on memory modules and/or chips.

“This cooler forces airflow through our open Xtreme Thermal Convection heatspreader design to offload even more heat from the entire module array, thus enhancing both stability and performance of the memory, especially when aggressively overclocking,” Mr. Mei explained.

The OCZ XTC cooler is backed by a 1 year warranty. Pricing is yet unknown.

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Comments currently: 4
Discussion started: 11/18/06 07:45:59 AM
Latest comment: 06/24/07 10:27:20 AM
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[1-3]

1. 
DDR/DDR2 doesn't need active cooling (unless the rest of your system is running fanless, in which case two 60mm fans isn't going to be on your "to buy" list anyhow). It might make more sense for the 5 people worldwide who are overlocking and using FBDimms though ...

Oh, wait, it's OCZ marketing it .. should have realised it has no practical use.
[Posted by: Cynic | Date: 11/18/06 07:45:59 AM]

2. 
Yeah, exactly what we need. More fans. Luckily, memory doesn't need it...

I hope the trend of cooler running CPUs continues, and I hope GPU makers follow that (clearly not gonna be this generation, but maybe next?). Who knows, maybe in 5 years fans would be a thing of the past?
[Posted by: shae | Date: 11/18/06 08:51:32 AM]
+ expand thread (1 answer)

3. 
Quite an interesting re-interpretation of forced-air cooling as "extreme convection"...
[Posted by: MTX | Date: 11/19/06 07:37:54 AM]

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