Test System
Test System |
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Processor: | Intel Core i9-12900K @ 5.1 GHz all cores OC Provided by: Intel |
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Motherboard: | ASUS ROG Maximus Z690 Formula Provided by: EKWB |
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Memory: | 2x 16 GB DDR5 Dominator Platinum RGB @ 5600 MHz 32-36-36-76 Provided by: CORSAIR |
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Video Card: | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 |
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Hard disk: | CORSAIR Force LE 480 GB SSD |
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Power Supply: | EVGA SuperNova 750G2 |
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Case: | Custom test bench
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Operating System: | Windows 10 64-bit |
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TIM: | Noctua NT-H2 |
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Test Methodology
A Xylem D5 pump, Aquaero 6 XT controller, and an
EK-Quantum Surface X360M radiator with
Phanteks T30-120 fans help complete the loop. The GPU is not placed in the loop to make the only source of heat the CPU, thus limiting testing to the CPU block itself. Average flow rate is set to 1 GPM and calibrated in-line temperature sensors are used to measure the coolant's temperature. Everything required is placed inside an environmental chamber with the ambient temperature set to 25 °C. Thermal paste cure time is taken into account, and three separate mounts/runs are done for statistical accuracy, and to remove chances of any mounting-related anomalies. For each run, a custom Prime95 test with small FFTs and AVX2 load is used, looping for 30 minutes, and CPU core temperatures are measured using AIDA64 with the average core temperature recorded at the end of each run. A delta T of CPU core and loop temperature is thus calculated for each run, with an average delta T that is then obtained across all three runs. This way, the cooling solution is taken out of the picture.
Test Results
Note that metal top blocks generally perform slightly better than the non-metal top blocks in my environmental chamber with active ventilation. There are some blocks here which are socket-specific, and others such as the Raijintek Forkis Pro RBW offer more compatibility but also mean they are not necessarily designed to specifically perform as best as possible on the Intel LGA 1700 socket. These two factors add to the rest of the puzzle including the installation mechanism and how well of a fit is achieved with uniform mounting pressure across the entirety of the CPU here. The Forkis Pro RBW doesn't fare as well here relative to the competition, and perhaps it is a case of the block having being designed before LGA 1700 was introduced. Adding installation support is nice of course, but can't change the cooling engine itself. It's within error margins admittedly, so everyone else without vested interest should keep this in mind.