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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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12/02/22 | Newegg | $30 popular |
20 |
11/24/22 | Amazon | $59.99 |
2 |
11/15/22 | Newegg | $30 popular |
10 |
11/10/22 | Newegg | $30 frontpage |
65 |
11/01/22 | Newegg | $39.99 |
25 |
10/22/22 | Newegg | $55 |
1 |
09/09/22 | Newegg | $35 frontpage |
14 |
09/04/22 | Amazon | $40 frontpage |
70 |
08/05/22 | Newegg | $40 |
2 |
04/11/22 | Newegg | $60 |
7 |
03/24/22 | Newegg | $59.99 popular |
12 |
03/10/22 | Newegg | $59.99 |
1 |
02/24/22 | Newegg | $60 |
0 |
02/14/22 | Newegg | $60 |
6 |
12/14/21 | Newegg | $50 |
1 |
11/28/21 | Newegg | $55 |
2 |
11/18/21 | Newegg | $50 |
0 |
11/17/21 | Newegg | $50 |
5 |
11/03/21 | Newegg | $54.98 |
1 |
10/18/21 | Newegg | $60 |
7 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
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Amazon | $149 |
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27 Comments
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Many also complain that it doesn't cool very well.
If you're actually trying to cool a 5800, 5900x or 5950x, you should look to buy a powerful, quiet, well-reviewed, well-supported and popular cpu cooler, preferably something with a 360mm radiator if your case can handle it.
You don't even need 280 AIO for a 5900X, let alone 360. I had Arctic LF II 240 on another 5900X build, with PBO Power Limit set to mobo, still well below throttles under Cinebench multicore (75F-ish room temp, Lian Li Lancool II Mesh)
After all 5950x only draws 140w if set to PBO Auto (aka all default). A Noctua D15 can borderline handle that load even with Zen3's sub-optimal heat dissipation.
This isn't top of the line AIO but it also only costs around half of those. With the savings you can just get two Arctic P14s. The pump noise often is associated with pump/rad placement, and I'd take NE average reviewers with a big grain of salt.
You don't even need 280 AIO for a 5900X, let alone 360. I had Arctic LF II 240 on another 5900X build, with PBO Power Limit set to mobo, still well below throttles under Cinebench multicore (75F-ish room temp, Lian Li Lancool II Mesh)
After all 5950x only draws 140w if set to PBO Auto (aka all default). A Noctua D15 can borderline handle that load even with Zen3's sub-optimal heat dissipation.
This isn't top of the line AIO but it also only costs around half of those. With the savings you can just get two Arctic P14s. The pump noise often is associated with pump/rad placement, and I'd take NE average reviewers with a big grain of salt.
That's interesting what you mention. In your opinion, how would you arrange the pump connections and place the radiator to avoid pump noise? I've yet to run into that myself despite having used a handful of water coolers.
Never had an issue with Newegg MIR. This year, I've submitted about 6 Newegg mail in rebates and have gotten all of them within 2 months.
Fwiw, I'd suggest watching some reviews on the Gamers Nexus YouTube channel and probably not buy this (tldr, this probably isn't terrible, but there are much better options)
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Overall should be a good deal. If the pump is noisy then RMA it or return it. These actually aren't loud but they have some pump QC issues.
That's interesting what you mention. In your opinion, how would you arrange the pump connections and place the radiator to avoid pump noise? I've yet to run into that myself despite having used a handful of water coolers.
Unless you do overclock, this aio is enough for almost all Consumer level CPUs. I have this one for i7 12700k and performance is ok.
For pump noise, make sure the pipe connection part on radiator is higher than cpu you should be fine
For those installing an AIO with a noisy pump or gurgling, be sure to orient the tubing correctly, the instructions do NOT tell you what ways are proper and improper, ideal is where the radiator is top mounted or if side mounted, always assure the tank part of the radiator is up (tubing at the bottom), with the top of the tank higher than the pump so air in the system does not get trapped in the pump or tubing section of the radiator.