Thursday, October 5th 2023

Arctic Announces the Freezer 4U-M CPU Cooler for Servers

ARCTIC, a leading manufacturer of low-noise PC coolers and components, releases a multi-compatible server cooler for 4U server racks. The Freezer 4U-M is the successor of the established Freezer 4U SP3. It is a versatile server cooler with a push-pull fan setup, a large contact area and an improved mounting system. Thanks to its compatibility with Intel's LGA4189 and LGA4677 as well as AMD's SP6, sTR5, SP3, TR4, sTRX4 and sWRX8 sockets, it is suitable for a wide range of Intel and AMD server processors.

Even with its particularly high cooling performance, it consumes only 2.88 watts, underlining its remarkable energy efficiency even when cooling powerful processors with up to 64 cores and a TDP of up to 350 watts. With a generous 53 mm of RAM clearance, the Freezer 4U-M allows the use of memory modules with larger heatsinks. This clearance allows efficient air circulation and ensures compatibility with a wide range of RAM variants.
With an optimized installation height of only 145 mm, the Freezer 4U-M fits into conventional 4U server racks and most 4U consumer cases.

Availability
The new Freezer 4U-M is available from today in the ARCTIC Webshop, on Amazon as well as on eBay starting at a price of 53,99€ (RRP 64,99€).
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9 Comments on Arctic Announces the Freezer 4U-M CPU Cooler for Servers

#1
Chaitanya
Heatpipe direct for server cooler, would love to read review of this cooler to see how it really performs compared to peers.
Posted on Reply
#2
Arco
WRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR.
Posted on Reply
#3
freeagent
The space between each pipe..

Seems a bit lazy.
Posted on Reply
#4
Nordic
I doubt it would be as efficient compared on a consumer cpu but I kinda want to see a review with some kind of custom mounting.
Posted on Reply
#5
Tropick
freeagentThe space between each pipe..

Seems a bit lazy.
Yeah this is really bad, like they just drunkenly eyeballed the spacing between the heatpipes on the bottom, ranges from no gap at all to like 2mm between them.
Posted on Reply
#6
Ed_1
TropickYeah this is really bad, like they just drunkenly eyeballed the spacing between the heatpipes on the bottom, ranges from no gap at all to like 2mm between them.
They should of offset every other heatpipe so they are not in a line like that, to get more surface area of the fins stack.
Posted on Reply
#7
cowcatwithahat
In my non engineering eyes it looks good; The space between the heat pipes might not be a problem if they are smoothly integrated with the main support plate.
Hopefully it will exceed the the expectations as we would always need exceptional performers in a lower price bracket.
As a side note and an example of exceeding expectations, I am still impressed by the performance of the AK620.
Posted on Reply
#8
vvkvvkvvk
It's not all new, it's just new revision of a previous cooler: www.arctic.de/en/Freezer-4U-SP3/ACFRE00081A

The build quality left a lot to hope for (top plate just fell off, the fins are not fixed with solder or anything put press fit to heatpipes etc) and tbh, I'm not a fan of the propiertary fans; luckily some chap at the L1 forums had made a 3D printable adapters for any std 120 mm fan that I had printed. It's also quite expensive, but you get away with that when you're the only game in town.

Having said that, the performance on the other hand is excellent, like always with the cheap Arctic stuff.
Posted on Reply
#9
AusWolf
For servers? It looks like an ideal LGA-1700 cooler to me.
Posted on Reply
Nov 17th, 2024 15:17 EST change timezone

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