Universal HSFs for Athlon64
Air cooling an overclocked CPU no longer means having to wear ear muffs, because the latest generation of HSFs are not only better than their predecessors, they're quiter too.
Scythe Ninja

| Manufacturer: | Price: |
| Scythe | £41.43 inc VAT |
| Reviewer: | Review Date: |
| James Gorbold | Feb 2006 |
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Verdict: Passively cool your CPU
Some historians believe that the Ninja were a highly secretive sect of spies and assassins from the Togakure mountains. Here at Custom PC, we know that the Scythe Ninja is a great CPU HSF, and thanks to its sharp aluminium fins, you can use it as a makibishi.
The Ninja is probably the largest CPU HSF ever produced, consisting of 12 heatpipes, a thick copper base and a huge tower block of aluminium fins. The Ninja is so large because it's designed to passively cool Athlon 64 and Pentium 4 processors, although you can mount two 120mm fans in a push-pull configuration. The fans can be fitted to any of the four sides of the Ninja, so hot air is never blown upwards towards the PSU.
Without a fan, the Ninja was unable to prevent our Pentium 4 test chip from overheating and shutting down, but with a quiet 120mm Akasa Amber fan, it cooled the CPU to 6ûC below the reference Intel HSF. The Ninja excels at cooling Athlon 64s; it cooled our overclocked and overvolted test chip to 15ûC below the reference AMD HSF with a 120mm fan, and to 7ûC below without a fan.
As the only HSF in the world that can passively cool an overclocked and overvolted Athlon 64, the Scythe Ninja embarrasses most actively-cooled HSFs into silence.