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Corsair's latest 240mm liquid cooler reviewed and rated.
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Read more.Quote:
Corsair's latest 240mm liquid cooler reviewed and rated.
H100i GTX, huh? My humble H100, without even an 'i' to its name, is nothing.
No, I think they'll have to get really radical and start using "ZZ" and more 'X's and maybe stick the word "Super" in there, or something like that. I'd definitely ditch my now pitiful H100 and trade up to a Corsair ZZH100XXR SuperBlackrad. Totally hot and yet really cool all at the same time.Quote:
But can the same formula continue to prove successful in the years to come?
As for the reality, when the pump and fans are competing with trance music, tinnitus and a washing machine, it's really not a problem. ;-)
On the other hand, if it's still as easy to ruin the thread of the screws/fittings as with my H100 then I can't recommend it without a "caveat emptor".
(For those who had the obvious thought there.. ;-) ... Yes, I do wish that I hadn't thought it a bargain that the supplier would build the system for barely any difference in what I paid for it.)
How long are the tubes? I don't know if it's just me, but it looks from the photos, that the tubes aren't long enough to allow mounting the radiator in the front of the case.
It would be nice to see other similarly priced and performing air coolers to the D15, like Phantek's PH-PC14PE, and be quiet!'s Dark Rock Pro 3 mixed into these results
Looks well engineered and made and for a high performance gaming rig its certainly an option.
For me its a no go. To expensive (£30 - £40 more than a top end air cooler) and to noisy.
I find it odd that Intel has not gone the route of a better supplied stock cooler that would add maybe a few pounds more to the cost of a cpu.
Pump noise is an issue ??? Mine is very quiet even with the pump at full speed...
The problem with AiO liquid coolers is simple, they are much worse than a custom loop, lack upgradeability (to cool GPU) and in a market where the TDP of high end CPUs is not increasing, even reducing. My concern with the reviews is that they all worry about pump noise, something I have never experienced in a custom loop
If all you want to cool is the CPU go air cooling. If you care about noise in a high end rig, custom water cool both the CPU and GPU. IN a custom loop with appropriate dampening of the pump noise will be a lot less than air cooling of CPU + GPU
My only moan about existing Corsair AIO water coolers is the fans are too loud,
so I replace them all with NDS PWM, which works much better. An H80 with 2xNDS
gave lower temps than a VenomousX, so I was happy. Likewise, I used an H110 with
4x NDS 140mm PWM for a 3930K setup.
Btw, don't use the Link sw, it conflicts way too much with other mbd sensors.
You're better off using mbd control sw or some other tool, at least with ASUS
boards anyway. Apparently this is a known but unresolved issue with the Link sw.
Ian.
after 6 months stopped working
Anyone here had a watercooling solution that has lasted a decent amount of time?
How much do I have to pay to have a watercooling solution that can last a CPU cycle? (3-5 years) The horror stories and risks are scary
I have an H100 too and it's awesome!!!
That sounds more like a Kawasaki-Honda hybrid!
It's all subjective. Mine is the loudest thing in my case and, on full chat, I can hear it downstairs through closed doors... :(
My H100 has lasted about 3 years so far, over 4 CPU upgrades and is fine...
A lot of them are either stories, embelishments or noob mistakes, I think. I've built several watercooling loops for people in the past and never had a single drip. You will usually get a few units that fail, regardless of product, but they typically get blown out of proportion because all the enthusiasts read about it and repost on other forums.
Things actually sucking across the board, like Acer's recent G-Sync monitor SNAFU, are comparatively rare.