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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Matthew Connatser

Intel discontinues its weakest stock cooler – RS1 Laminar cooler was only used for the Pentium G7400 and Celeron G6900

Intel Laminar Cooler RS1.

Intel has discontinued its RS1 Laminar stock cooler, which was previously the lowest-end model among the company’s three stock coolers.

Introduced in 2021 alongside 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs, the RS1 uses an all-aluminum design with a plastic shroud that’s just 47mm tall and weighs around 260 grams. It’s essentially an upgraded version of Intel’s old stock cooler, with a more optimally designed heatsink and a larger, five-blade fan, and is rated to cool 65 watt chips.

Intel also has two other stock coolers, the RH1 and the RM1. The RM1 is almost identical to the RS1, except it has a copper slug at the bottom for better heat transfer, as well as an LED light strip that circles the fan. Like the now-discontinued RS1, the RM1 is also rated for 65 watts. The RH1 meanwhile is a wholly different design that’s taller, uses more copper, and a more premium metal shroud.

The RS1 only ever shipped with two dual-core CPUs: the Pentium Gold G7400 and the Celeron G6900. Although Intel’s weakest stock cooler isn’t particularly robust, it doesn’t struggle to cool either the G7400 or the G6900 since both have a TDP of just 46 watts.

That’s probably one of the main reasons why it got discontinued. It’s hard to justify making a stock cooler just for two CPUs, let alone just for dual-core Pentiums and Celerons, which aren’t exactly popular in recent times.

Intel says that the RS1 won’t have a direct successor, but will just be replaced by the RM1. Simplifying its stock cooler offerings could have also been another motivation for Intel to ditch its all-aluminum cooler since the RS1 and RM1 are already nearly identical. The RM1 is already used for the vast majority of locked Intel CPUs, everything from the Core i3s and the Core i7s in the 12th, 13th, and 14th generations.

The RM1 is also used for the Intel Processor 300, a rebranded Pentium G7400. The Processor 300 came out just around a year ago, and the fact that it used the RM1 may have been a sign that the RS1 wasn’t long for this world.

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