EK-Quantum Velocity² CPU Water Block (LGA 1700) Review 34

EK-Quantum Velocity² CPU Water Block (LGA 1700) Review

Thermal Performance »

Liquid Flow Restriction

I use a Xylem D5 pump with a standalone reservoir with the pump being powered through a direct SATA connection from a PSU used only for watercooling components and not part of the test system. The pump is controlled by an Aquacomputer Aquaero 6 XT in PWM mode. There is a calibrated in-line flow meter and Dwyer 490 Series 1 wet-wet manometer to measure the pressure drop of the component being tested. Every component is connected to the manometer by the way of soft tubing, compression fittings, and two T-fittings that have been accounted for when it comes to the liquid flow restriction in the loop.


This is a fresh start for CPU blocks being tested on the LGA 1700 platform, thus I have chosen to have only new blocks here that have not been covered before. This also allows all these blocks to have pricing including various logistics and material costs so that I can generate performance per dollar charts again. Apologies then to other manufacturers from before but, to be fair, I don't have your LGA 1700 versions either. The one entry here that is not specifically supporting LGA 1700 is the EK-Quantum Velocity² for LGA 1200 as marked above. EK had sent this over by mistake originally instead of the correct LGA 1700 version and I wanted to see how this would fare, assuming it could even fit. As it turns out it fits fine enough although the mounting pressure could be better. Still, when it comes to the pressure drop across the CPU blocks in question, there isn't really a tangible difference between the two EK-Quantum Velocity² blocks, as expected. All the EK blocks fare quite well here too and I would classify the EK-Quantum Velocity² LGA 1700 block as a low restriction CPU block accordingly.
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Jul 6th, 2024 02:20 EDT change timezone

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