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Raijintek Leto PRO RGB

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As introduced before, Raijintek is a fairly “nascent” accessory manufacturer when it was only established in 2013. Still, it has made great strides to be able to penetrate the “playground” of accessories. The arena where the “giants” are fiercely competitive, especially when products from China massively dominate the market with many designs and features … sounds attractive but competitive enough thanks to the extremely “soft” price. In that context, the company has launched many impressive product lines for gamers, including Raijintek MYA RBW, the “heavy” cooling fan that Biareview had the opportunity to introduce to readers, or Raijintek Juno RBW with a “pepper” configuration for gamers with a tight budget. All products stand out with their very own style, colorful design, good quality of artistry, and impressive heat dissipation efficiency in the price range.

In this article, the testing team will continue to evaluate a mid-range product of the company with a more streamlined design but still retain the style and power of the “elder” called Raijintek Leto PRO RGB. That is one of Raijintek’s “mainstream” products in the Asian market in the $50-range radiator fan segment, which is very popular with gamers when they first assemble.

If you have ever seen the Raijintek MYA RBW review article, you will easily imagine the “quality” of Raijintek in your product design. It is a certainty in design and construction that few products in the same segment can compare. Raijintek Leto Pro RGB is similar. The product is almost a shortened version of Raijintek MYA RBW in the higher-end segment. Four long and large heatsinks are bent into a U shape with a smooth and glossy surface in direct contact with the CPU to help bring heat directly from the CPU through the pipes to each heatsink.

The heatsinks on the Raijintek Leto Pro RGB are not as thick and heavy as the “elder.” However, they are still designed to be cleverly paired and extremely solid, ensuring bearing capacity and very uncomfortable bending warping in the presence of external forces. All are covered with a black powder coating that protects these metal parts from oxidation but still ensures the relative heat dissipation of the product compared to “ignoring” the grilles this heat on other cheap products.

With the “small” size of a mid-range heatsink with quite a lot of room in the case, Raijintek Leto PRO RGB is only equipped with a 12025 RGB PWM fan instead of an ultra-thin fan mounted on the “keyboard.” This cooling fan is designed at its studio in Germany with anti-vibration rubber sealing technology, providing smooth operation for the fan. Fan power is also acceptable, with RGB LEDs controlled via the RGB Header connection instead of via the ADD Header port like on the Raijintek MYA RBW. That means that you can easily synchronize the fan’s backlight with the whole system, but the downside is that you can’t control the effects of the lights, like with the connection through the ADD Header port.

Coming to the actual tests, Raijintek Leto PRO RGB shows that the performance is as strong as the elder Raijintek MYA RBW in all three tests; maybe it is only a very small distance the “coolness” batch” is quite famous of the Intel Core i7 8700 CPU.

The CPU’s temperature was only 43 degrees Celsius in the normal idle test, a very small difference from 42 degrees of “elder” and within the measurement error. Meanwhile, the temperature when playing heavy games quickly “jumps” to 73 degrees Celsius and is quite stable at this level. That shows Raijintek Leto PRO RGB also “inherits” Raijintek’s typical fan configuration setting when prioritizing noise reduction when operating when the temperature is still within the allowable threshold.

Come to the stress test of six cores and 12 threads using Prime95 software within 30 minutes, with all threads working continuously at 100%. Raijintek Leto Pro RGB proved to be quite effective when keeping the temperature stable at 68 degrees Celsius with the fan speed at 1400rpm. Compared to the “ultra-thin” fan that comes with the Raijintek MYA RBW, the 12025 RGB PWM fan unit operates relatively quietly at the same fan speed thanks to its sturdy design and rubber seals. But these differences are still very small and must be listened to distinguish them carefully. The stress test temperature at this level shows that the product’s operation is still extremely effective. You can completely upgrade one more fan to increase the heatsink’s performance.

If there is a point to criticize, the problem still lies in the fact that Raijintek Leto PRO RGB is quite difficult to disassemble. The product is almost “original” Raijintek MYA RBW’s clamp design with dozens of screws forces the user to continuously screw, screw, and screw with three different types of screw heads used for the whole assembly process. Fortunately, compared to the “dinosaur” size of the senior that occupies most of the chassis area, the size of the Raijintek Leto Pro RGB is much neater, so the two screws of the clamp are not obscured and easier to disassemble. But it still requires users to have a few screw skills if they don’t want the heatsink to slide back and forth on the CPU surface, damaging the thermal paste.

The problem of “wires” is still another small drawback on Raijintek Leto PRO RGB because both wires are plugged in “cross-band” on the case, which is more unsightly than the rear wiring method.

where can you get a Raijintek Leto PRO RGB online

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