Jump to content

H110i GT pump RPM question

Go to solution Solved by CaptainPebbleDash,

Hey guys!

 

 

I just have a question.

 

 

At what RPM should I run the pump on my H110i GT? Cuz I saw a video on youtube where his pump was just running around 700ish RPM in Corsair Link but I think it was a H100i GTX though. Mine is currently running on Quiet Mode and the pump is around 2363-2365 RPM even on idle. Is it ok to run the pump at this high RPM? Sorry for potato english.

 

 

Thanks in advance!  :)

 

That's the stock speed for the pump. You only have two options to choice from and that's Quiet/Performance. Of which doesn't make much of a difference in getting rid of the heat. 

 

Just keep it on Quiet and forget about the Pump RPM.

Hey guys!

 

 

I just have a question.

 

 

At what RPM should I run the pump on my H110i GT? Cuz I saw a video on youtube where his pump was just running around 700ish RPM in Corsair Link but I think it was a H100i GTX though. Mine is currently running on Quiet Mode and the pump is around 2363-2365 RPM even on idle. Is it ok to run the pump at this high RPM? Sorry for potato english.

 

 

Thanks in advance!  :)

CPU: Intel i5-4690K @ Stock | GPU: Zotac GTX 970 @ Stock | COOLER:Corsair H110i GT Stock fans | MOBO: Gigabyte Z97-X Gaming 5 | RAM: 2x4GB GSKILL RIPJAWS X 1866mhz PSU: Silverstone 500W Strider Essential Series | CASE: NZXT S340 | CASE FANS: x1 120mm TT Riing red LED, x1 140mm TT Riing red LED MOUSE: Razer DeathAdder Chroma & Logitech G502 Proteus Spectrum KEYBOARD: Varmilo VA87MR Gateron Red Switches | HEADSET: Logitech G230 | SSD: ADATA 256GB SP900 HDD: 500GB WD Blue & 1TB WD Caviar Black OS: Windows 10 | DISPLAYS: ASUS VX239H and some shitty Samsung 720p

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Hey guys!

 

 

I just have a question.

 

 

At what RPM should I run the pump on my H110i GT? Cuz I saw a video on youtube where his pump was just running around 700ish RPM in Corsair Link but I think it was a H100i GTX though. Mine is currently running on Quiet Mode and the pump is around 2363-2365 RPM even on idle. Is it ok to run the pump at this high RPM? Sorry for potato english.

 

 

Thanks in advance!  :)

 

That's the stock speed for the pump. You only have two options to choice from and that's Quiet/Performance. Of which doesn't make much of a difference in getting rid of the heat. 

 

Just keep it on Quiet and forget about the Pump RPM.

CPU: i7 8700k   Motherboard: Asus Maximus Hero  RAM: 16GB @ 3600Mhz  GPU: MSI 980Ti 6G  Case: Fractal Design R5 (4 Intakes/3Exhausts)  Storage: Crucial BX100 SSD, Samsung 850 & Seagate 2TB HDD  PSU: Seasonic M12II Evo '850W'  CPU Cooling: Corsair H110i GT 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

That's the stock speed for the pump. You only have two options to choice from and that's Quiet/Performance. Of which doesn't make much of a difference in getting rid of the heat. 

 

Just keep it on Quiet and forget about the Pump RPM.

Thanks! I thought so because I tried to check any possible settings/options in Corsair Link to possibly change the pump RPM manually but didn't find anything. So I guess I'll just have to leave it in Quiet Mode then.  :)

CPU: Intel i5-4690K @ Stock | GPU: Zotac GTX 970 @ Stock | COOLER:Corsair H110i GT Stock fans | MOBO: Gigabyte Z97-X Gaming 5 | RAM: 2x4GB GSKILL RIPJAWS X 1866mhz PSU: Silverstone 500W Strider Essential Series | CASE: NZXT S340 | CASE FANS: x1 120mm TT Riing red LED, x1 140mm TT Riing red LED MOUSE: Razer DeathAdder Chroma & Logitech G502 Proteus Spectrum KEYBOARD: Varmilo VA87MR Gateron Red Switches | HEADSET: Logitech G230 | SSD: ADATA 256GB SP900 HDD: 500GB WD Blue & 1TB WD Caviar Black OS: Windows 10 | DISPLAYS: ASUS VX239H and some shitty Samsung 720p

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Pretty sure pump's don't work in RPM. That's the radiator fans.

My Gaming Rig;  Motherboard - ASUS Maximus VI Hero | CPU - Intel i5 4670k @4.5Ghz 1.25v | GPU - GIGABYTE GTX 980 @Stock | RAM -  16GB Corsair Vengeance @1866Mhz | CPU Cooler - Corsair H100i | Storage #1 - Samsung 840 Basic 250GB SSD | Storage #2 - Sandisk II 480GB SSD | Storage #3 - 2TB 7200rpm 64mb HDDPSU - Corsair HX750 | Case - Fractal Design R4 |

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Pretty sure pump's don't work in RPM. That's the radiator fans.

AIO pumps are impellers iirc (like a jet-ski) so they do spin, and therefore have an RPM. Which can be changed

Aftermarket 980Ti >= Fury X >= Reference 980Ti > Fury > 980 > 390X > 390 >= 970 380X > 380 >= 960 > 950 >= 370 > 750Ti = 360

"The Orange Box" || CPU: i5 4690k || RAM: Kingston Hyper X Fury 16GB || Case: Aerocool DS200 (Orange) || Cooler: Cryorig R1 Ultimate || Storage: Kingston SSDNow V300 240GB + WD Black 1TB || PSU: Corsair RM750 || Mobo: ASUS Z97-A || GPU: EVGA GTX 970 FTW+

"Unnamed Form Factor Switch" || CPU: i7 6700K || RAM: Kingston HyperX Fury 16GB || Case: Phanteks Enthoo Evolv Mini ITX (White) || Cooler: Cryorig R1 Ultimate (Green Cover) || Storage: Samsung 850 Evo 1TB || PSU: XFX XTR 550W || Mobo: ASUS Z170I Pro Gaming || GPU: EVGA GTX 970 FTW+

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

AIO pumps are impellers iirc (like a jet-ski) so they do spin, and therefore have an RPM. Which can be changed

 

Didn't realise you could change the RPM of an AIO.

My Gaming Rig;  Motherboard - ASUS Maximus VI Hero | CPU - Intel i5 4670k @4.5Ghz 1.25v | GPU - GIGABYTE GTX 980 @Stock | RAM -  16GB Corsair Vengeance @1866Mhz | CPU Cooler - Corsair H100i | Storage #1 - Samsung 840 Basic 250GB SSD | Storage #2 - Sandisk II 480GB SSD | Storage #3 - 2TB 7200rpm 64mb HDDPSU - Corsair HX750 | Case - Fractal Design R4 |

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Didn't realise you could change the RPM of an AIO.

 

Yup, you can change the pump's rpm on H110i GT, H80i GT and H100i GTX using Corsair Link software. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×