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Arctic Announces Liquid Freezer Line of AIO Liquid CPU Coolers

btarunr

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Arctic announces its first liquid coolers, the Liquid Freezer 120 and Liquid Freezer 240. For years ARCTIC provides delighted gamer and enthusiasts with CPU air coolers of all classes. With the first water coolers the processor cooling now reaches a new level. The Liquid Freezer 120 and the Liquid Freezer 240 start in the market not only as the quietest but also as the most powerful all-in-one coolers of their class.

Ready for 16 cores and overclocking? With the Liquid Freezer 240, you are. The high-performance water cooler deals with up to 300 Watts TDP and has four fans on board. The Liquid Freezer 120 distinguishes itself by strong 250 Watts with dual fans. The almost silent 120 mm fans, mounted on opposite sides of the radiator, provide a great airflow by push-pull configuration. All fans are controllable with PST function to adjust the fan speed based on CPU temperature. Latest motor technology and smooth tubes offer top performance at only 2 watt power consumption.



Quality that lasts: Precise CNC manufacturing and the Fluid Dynamic Bearing ensure that the service promise can be fulfilled long-term.
And you also don't have to worry about limited space - in contrast to most high-end air coolers the CPU water coolers fit in every standard PC case. The lighter weight load on the CPU socket makes them furthermore absolutely transport safe.

So the CPU water coolers are just the ideal choice - for Intel as well as AMD sockets.

QUICK FACTS Liquid Freezer 120 Liquid CPU Cooler for Overclockers
  • Minimum Noise Level
  • Fits every standard case
  • Most efficient pump
  • Longer service life
  • Every unit performans the same
  • MX-4 thermal compound
Liquid Freezer 240 High Performance CPU Water Cooler
  • Ready for 16 cores and overclocking
MSRP Liquid Freezer 120: 71.99 £
MSRP Liquid Freezer 240: 92.99 £
Availability: December 2015.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
The single rad totally reminds me of my Antec H2O 920 AiO... which is a good thing :)
 
It's just so stupid that the included TIM is in a tiny bag instead of a syringe. I guess they just try to save few cents in production costs..
 
MX-4 thermal compound
pre-applied, or also it came with a tube?

The single rad totally reminds me of my Antec H2O 920 AiO... which is a good thing :)
same as my water 3.0 Pro, thick rad!


It's just so stupid that the included TIM is in a tiny bag instead of a syringe. I guess they just try to save few cents in production costs..
where did you found out that?

my primary guess, asetek unit? 120mm rad looks exactly as mine asetek branded unit... so ... i guess probably yes!


Regards,
 
Yeah, I hate those thin radiators. They feel like they can't even cool a HDD...
 
Yeah, I hate those thin radiators. They feel like they can't even cool a HDD...
I've found that thin radiators do a surprisingly good job. I've used a H60 twice. On a FX-8350 at 4.6 GHz, it can keep the processor below 60 C at full load. On an i5-6600K, it's total overkill - the processor rarely exceeds 40 C unless I overclock to 4.2 GHz and run intel burn test, in which case (iirc) it got close to 60 C.
 
I use custom super low fan RPM through motherboard fan curve and not fan control through pump, because that's crap and noisy as hell. I don't think thin radiator would be able to keep up. But this thick one does. I did buy one of the best high pressure fans so they can push air through.
 
I've found that thin radiators do a surprisingly good job. I've used a H60 twice. On a FX-8350 at 4.6 GHz, it can keep the processor below 60 C at full load. On an i5-6600K, it's total overkill - the processor rarely exceeds 40 C unless I overclock to 4.2 GHz and run intel burn test, in which case (iirc) it got close to 60 C.
agreed i finished a build like 3 months ago, using corasir h60 too, amd 9350 FX OC to 4.5ghz full time, never goes up to 70c... using just one fan ...
so thin rads aren't bad at all ...

@RejZoR explain the post you did please...
 
I use custom super low fan RPM through motherboard fan curve and not fan control through pump, because that's crap and noisy as hell. I don't think thin radiator would be able to keep up. But this thick one does. I did buy one of the best high pressure fans so they can push air through.

I may have to search the old review comparing thick and thin radiator from skinneelabs. Actually the difference between thick and thin is not much even comparing between radiator that is is twice the thickness of the thin one. It surprises me the difference is 1 celcius at the low fan speed.

Thick radiator would only begin to pull away from the thin when you are using high speed fans that can move a huge volume of air. The reason for the small difference is air absorb that much heat before its use up.
 
If we can get a review and it shows to cool a 4790k decently, this might be my next upgrade.
 
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