CORSAIR Hydro X Series XR7 360 Radiator Review 6

CORSAIR Hydro X Series XR7 360 Radiator Review

Liquid Flow Restriction »

Closer Examination


If there was any doubt as to the OEM, seeing the CORSAIR Hydro XR7 360 in person removes it. The telltale end-tank design especially screams current-generation Black Ice radiators, and yet there is enough here to where CORSAIR has made it its own, including offering more case compatibility than the retail Black Ice radiators with the 120 mm width in particular to match the fan diameter itself. At 395 mm in length, it is also about average in length for triple 120 mm radiators, so it will fit in most compatible cases for such radiators. The radiator as a whole comes in all black aside from the white CORSAIR logo on the sides and offers excellent compatibility with most PC DIY build color schemes.


The fan holes are slightly inset from the frame and the standard 15 mm apart, which works with just about any case today. There are screw shields underneath each hole, just in case you use screws longer than apt. The fan holes are offset from the coolant tubes for further redundancy, although not by much.

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The two BSP G1/4" ports on the end tanks are threaded perfectly and come with delrin stop plugs that are really only meant to keep dust out during transit. You would replace them with standard BSP G1/4" threaded fittings to use the radiator as part of your loop regardless. The frame is made out of brass, as is the end tank, with a thick powder coat applied for longevity. The core itself adopts the more typical U-flow design for the coolant, as opposed to the Hardware Labs unique top-bottom approach, so it would have been nice to see more ports added here.

There are two rows of fins/tube stacks with twelve 1.2 mm thick tubes per row. The 24-way parallel split of the coolant will help decrease coolant flow restriction relative to single-row radiators, including the CORSAIR Hydro XR5 360, but the comparatively thinner tubing will again increase it. The fins are individually the same as those on the Black Ice Nemesis GTX/GTS/LX/LS, with 25 µm thickness making them far thinner than any other radiator fin in this market. They are split, as seen above, but have a different average fin density of 13 FPI (fins per inch) than the retail Black Ice radiators at 16 FPI. The lower fin thickness, lack of louvers, ~8 mm height, and thinner tubes mean that these should actually have less airflow restriction than other radiators with a lower FPI number but thicker fins and tubes, which just goes to show how FPI as a metric does not tell the whole story when it comes to deciding on radiators for performance/noise.
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