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Albania, Tirana
1 Level
666 Review
45 Karma

Review on YaeCCC LED Liquid CPU Cooler Water Cooling System Radiator 120mm with Fan for Intel AMD by Justin Bradford

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Weaker than cheap aftermarket tower cooler Vetroo V5

TL;DR: better than standard box cooler/ghost stealth, worse than cheap aftermarket tower cooler Vetroo V5. I think it could be on par or weaker than Wraith Prism. I bought this AIO for my Ryzen 3600 processor hoping to lower case temperatures as I use a small case with poor airflow, the Q500L. This AIO sits on a tower and is exhausting. I was hoping that this AIO would at least match the thermal performance of my Vetroo cooling tower, but it doesn't. It's decent for gaming loads, but Cinebench R20 really heats it up. The mounting brackets are roughly the same as for mounting the Vetroo V5 tower cooler. The pump on this AIO bottoms out at around 2300rpm which is slow compared to my 120mm EVGA CLC11 AIO which maxed out at 5400rpm (mounted on a 1080TI with a Kraken G12, cheap but just fine for Intel, otherwise I would buy it for Ryzen). . My 4.2GHz all-core overclock became unstable during Cinebench R20 and I had to downgrade to 4.15GHz. The idle temperatures are around 50-55°C, just like the usual Wraith Stealth rates. In the Cinebench R20 test, this AIO reached 80°C fairly quickly, even with the pump and fan running at maximum. It can run heavy non-CPU games at 60°C to 65°C. CPU-intensive games can reach 68°C to 73°C. My Vetroo V5 Tower cooler coped better with all cooling tasks. It's almost 3-5°C more cooling. The idle temperature of the Vetroo V5 at 4.2 GHz is 5-10°C lower at around 40-45°C. I wouldn't buy it again for Ryzen. I'll probably test this on my i5-6500 next time. It still uses the stock Intel box cooler.

Pros
  • New
Cons
  • Slightly torn