Thursday, April 30th 2020

EK Water Blocks Announces EK VRM Bridge for Maximus XII

EK, the leading liquid cooling gear manufacturer, is ready to support the newly-released ROG Maximus XII Formula motherboard with a unique, patent-pending liquid distribution VRM Bridge. The EK-Quantum Momentum VRM Bridge ROG Maximus XII Formula D-RGB is a purpose-engineered connection piece that bridges the existing integrated CrossChill EK III VRM cooling and the CPU water block into a single entity. The ROG Maximus XII Formula is the carrier of the iconic Maximus motherboard series, while the EK-developed VRM Bridge solution will help bring out its full potential.

The EK-Quantum Momentum VRM Bridge is the only off-the-shelf solution that will bridge multiple liquid cooling components with a unique mounting mechanism. It is specially made for the ROG Maximus XII Formula, and upgrading from any previous motherboard will be easy since you'll be able to reuse any of the existing Intel-socket-compatible EK-Quantum Velocity CPU water blocks.
EK's RnD team spent countless hours developing and perfecting this VRM Bridge solution. And since diamonds are made under pressure, after several iterations, the result was a second to none diamond-shaped product that impeccably integrates with aesthetics of the ROG Maximus XII Formula motherboard.

The voltage regulating module cooler of the Formula motherboard has two operating regimes - the CrossChill EK III lets you cool the VRM with either air or water. Water cooling will provide lower temperatures, and in doing so, improve stability during high overclock frequencies. The redesigned cooling channels inside the cooling block have wider copper fins, delivering up to 37.2°C lower MOSFET temperatures when cooled by water.

The new EK-Quantum Momentum VRM Bridge will replace the standard approach to connecting the integrated CrossChill EK III with the liquid cooling loop. Instead of using several angled and four tubing fittings, you only need EK's VRM Bridge (plus two fittings that would be used on the CPU block anyway). The Bridge acts as a single entity, channeling coolant through the CPU water block and VRM cooling block with two connection points.

A unique mounting and locking solution have been developed exclusively for the EK-Quantum Momentum VRM Bridge. Here at EK, we care about design, form, and functionality, which drove us to develop this patent-pending mounting mechanism. The user-friendly locking system is operated in just a few simple steps. This allows for the CPU water block and the integrated ROG Maximus XII Formula VRM cooling block to be connected in a few minutes. There is no need to mount several angled fittings, cut tubes to size, and then connect all that together - the EK Bridge solution simplifies the whole process.

The EK-Quantum Momentum VRM Bridge ROG Maximus XII Formula D-RGB is CNC-milled out of a single piece of high-grade glass-like cast acrylic top cover. The entire VRM Bridge slides onto special nickel-plated barb push-in fittings, while the 2 mm thick stainless-steel base plate acts as the locking mechanism that latches to the barb fittings.

This product is compatible with ASUS Aura RGB control software. The arrow marking on the 3-pin LED connector is to be aligned with the +5V marking on the Aura_gen2 header.

MSRP: 89.90€.
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7 Comments on EK Water Blocks Announces EK VRM Bridge for Maximus XII

#1
Object55
Yeah I don't know about that. Not very aesthetically pleasing.
Posted on Reply
#2
Mods1965
I love the look of this block. Great design.
Posted on Reply
#3
Kohl Baas
It's maybe me, but I don't see the point of this. This basically turns the factory VRM cooling and a velocity block into a monoblock setup. If you want that, go for the "Code" or the "Extreme" and buy a monoblock... Costs almost the same as a single Velocity block.
Posted on Reply
#4
Totally
What's the point of this? Why not just get the monoblock?
Posted on Reply
#5
Mods1965
TotallyWhat's the point of this? Why not just get the monoblock?
The idea is to give someone already owning a EK block the option to add this, rather then buying a new mono block.
I get the argument you make, but it is an interesting idea to try to provide an option to expand and reuse components, rather then continually replace.
Posted on Reply
#6
Steamroller
Mods1965The idea is to give someone already owning a EK block the option to add this, rather then buying a new mono block.
I get the argument you make, but it is an interesting idea to try to provide an option to expand and reuse components, rather then continually replace.
The whole thing will be even more interesting if future motherboards will use the same layout.
Posted on Reply
#7
Mods1965
SteamrollerThe whole thing will be even more interesting if future motherboards will use the same layout.
Lets hope this will be the case. The environmental benefit is itself important to reuse, rather then just replace.
Posted on Reply
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