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Which 240mm AIO?

I'm about to bite the bullet and upgrade my 3700X to a 5900X, and I'm considering getting an AIO for the first time, because I'm worried about the higher TDP part pushing temps out of control.

 

Right now, I'm rocking a Noctua U12S chomax.black, with a second fan added. On the CPU compatibility chart, Noctua rates the U12S as sufficient for cooling a stock 5900X. The U12A, which comes with two fans (which I imagine makes it closer to my actual setup), is rated for cooling the 5900X with OC. I like a silent profile, so currently, my 3700X idles at 50C and gets up to 67C under load. I don't want to go much higher on the temps and I'd prefer not to run the fans any faster, so that's why I'm considering an AIO.

 

However, my case will only fit a 240mm rad up top, so I'm not sure if that will be enough to actually beat out my current setup. Assuming I do get the AIO, I've narrowed it down to three choices, partially driven by my general distaste for RGB and that I have a very clean black and white build. In no particular order:

 

  • Be Quite Pure Loop 240mm
  • EK AIO Basic 240mm
  • Artic Liquid Freezer II 240mm

From my research, these all seem to be really good AIOs, but I've found it very difficult to find reviews specifically for the 240mm rad size, with most focusing on 280mm. I'd have to assume the cooling performance will be some measure worse, but no idea how much different it will really be in practice.

 

Still, bouncing all this around in my head, so I'm totally open to suggestions or other options.

 

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 5900X · Cooler: Artic Liquid Freezer II 280 · Motherboard: MSI MEG X570 Unify · RAM: G.skill Ripjaws V 2x16GB 3600MHz CL16 (2Rx8) · Graphics Card: ASUS GeForce RTX 3060 Ti TUF Gaming · Boot Drive: 500GB WD Black SN750 M.2 NVMe SSD · Game Drive: 2TB Crucial MX500 SATA SSD · PSU: Corsair White RM850x 850W 80+ Gold · Case: Corsair 4000D Airflow · Monitor: MSI Optix MAG342CQR 34” UWQHD 3440x1440 144Hz · Keyboard: Corsair K100 RGB Optical-Mechanical Gaming Keyboard (OPX Switch) · Mouse: Corsair Ironclaw RGB Wireless Gaming Mouse

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27 minutes ago, Chris Pratt said:

Right now, I'm rocking a Noctua U12S chomax.black, with a second fan added

Will be plenty for 5900x if you have a good case with decent airflow.

27 minutes ago, Chris Pratt said:

I don't want to go much higher on the temps

Why? Thermalthottling happen at around 85C and damage in around 95c-100c

 

28 minutes ago, Chris Pratt said:

Artic Liquid Freezer II 240mm

The best one. Or if you can get the Be quiet Silent loop 240mm that would be the best. Overall one of the lowest sound levels with one of the best cooling performance. Cooling performance similar to the artco freezer but the silent loop is quiter.

QUOTE ME  FOR ANSWER.

 

Main PC:

Spoiler

|Ryzen 7 3700x, OC to 4.2ghz @1.3V, 67C, or 4.4ghz @1.456V, 87C || Asus strix 5700 XT, +50 core, +50 memory, +50 power (not a great overclocker) || Asus Strix b550-A || G.skill trident Z Neo rgb 32gb 3600mhz cl16-19-19-19-39, oc to 3733mhz with the same timings || Cooler Master ml360 RGB AIO || Phanteks P500A Digital || Thermaltake ToughPower grand RGB750w 80+gold || Samsung 850 250gb and Adata SX 6000 Lite 500gb || Toshiba 5400rpm 1tb || Asus Rog Theta 7.1 || Asus Rog claymore || Asus Gladius 2 origin gaming mouse || Monitor 1 Asus 1080p 144hz || Monitor 2 AOC 1080p 75hz || 

Test Rig.

Spoiler

Ryzen 5 3400G || Gigabyte b450 S2H || Hyper X fury 2x4gb 2666mhz cl 16 ||Stock cooler || Antec NX100 || Silverstone essential 400w || Transgend SSD 220s 480gb ||

Just Sold

Spoiler

| i3 9100F || Msi Gaming X gtx 1050 TI || MSI Z390 A-Pro || Kingston 1x16gb 2400mhz cl17 || Stock cooler || Kolink Horizon RGB || Corsair CV 550w || Pny CS900 120gb ||

 

Tier lists for building a PC.

 

Motherboard tier list. Tier A for overclocking 5950x. Tier B for overclocking 5900x, Tier C for overclocking 5800X. Tier D for overclocking 5600X. Tier F for 4/6 core Cpus at stock. Tier E avoid.

(Also case airflow matter or if you are using Downcraft air cooler)

Spoiler

 

Gpu tier list. Rtx 3000 and RX 6000 not included since not so many reviews. Tier S for Water cooling. Tier A and B for overcloking. Tier C stock and Tier D avoid.

( You can overclock Tier C just fine, but it can get very loud, that is why it is not recommended for overclocking, same with tier D)

Spoiler

 

Psu tier List. Tier A for Rtx 3000, Vega and RX 6000. Tier B For anything else. Tier C cheap/IGPU. Tier D and E avoid.

(RTX 3000/ RX 6000 Might run just fine with higher wattage tier B unit, Rtx 3070 runs fine with tier B units)

Spoiler

 

Cpu cooler tier list. Tier 1&2 for power hungry Cpus with Overclock. Tier 3&4 for overclocking Ryzen 3,5,7 or lower power Intel Cpus. Tier 5 for overclocking low end Cpus or 4/6 core Ryzen. Tier 6&7 for stock. Tier 8&9 Ryzen stock cooler performance. Do not waste your money!

Spoiler

 

Storage tier List. Tier A for Moving files/  OS. Tier B for OS/Games. Tier C for games. Tier D budget Pcs. Tier E if on sale not the worst but not good.

(With a grain of salt, I use tier C for OS myself)

Spoiler

 

Case Tier List. Work In Progress. Most Phanteks airflow series cases already done!

Ask me anything :)

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I'd certainly throw an eye at EK's AiO's. They are not really priced ridiculously and they now come without the RGB vomit. EK's AiOs have always been one of the best and could almost rival dedicated water cooling loops. So worth checking those out. Otherwise, Liquid Freezer has been universally praised.

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Out of those three probably the EK.

AMD R7 5800X3D | Thermalright Aqua Elite 360, 3x TL-B12, 2x TL-K12
Asus Crosshair VIII Dark Hero | 32GB G.Skill Trident Z @ 3733C14 1.5v
Zotac 4070 Ti Trinity OC @ 3045/1495 | WD SN8501TB, SN850X2TB
Seasonic Vertex GX-1000 | Fractal Torrent Compact, 2x TL-B14, TL-D14X

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