12:19 "In terms of priority, it is making sure you get the largest size that will fit into your chassis comfortably." My sister has been living by this mantra for years.
I LOVE THIS. I literally posted on your old rad guide about u making a new video, and tweeted you about it - and TWO DAYS LATER you post this. Amazing. Swear you are the best ever
I've had the same Corsair H100i for almost 5 years for my overclocked 6700K and it still runs and cools like a dream. I have reapplied thermal paste once or twice but am still a VERY happy AIO customer.
@@fiercebon14 I swapped the fans on day 1 when I got it to the corsair maglift fans vs the ball bearing ones they came with. (the ML 120's) Plus, they came in color vs just black or grey. the ML 120's still work great to this day.
I have some been spinning away for years and are as silent as the day i got them, i was going to buy the h150 and was wondering if they'd out perform the supplied corsair fans?
@@addz17 Kinda. The fans they include are low RPM, and the radiator is optimized for low RPMs(low airflow restriction, sub-30mm thickness). Meaning it gets almost no scaling from more airflow/static pressure. As you get thicker/more restrictive radiators(like 60mm+ thickness or very high FPI rads), you want something like EK Varder EVOs, Noctua 12x25, or gentle typhoons.
Even underclocked mine still acts like a space heater. It's so sad xD I'm gonna build some water chiller contraption when I can. Formula Z board gets waaaay too hot, and then just dies. Stability eludes me
@@dangstalker I used a Gigabyte 990FXA UD3 and the vrms didn't get that hot surprisingly. It was a very solid board. The processor however, I could cook a meal on but joking aside it was a half decent processor for its time even if it did run a little hot.
I reused my old coolermaster case with the double wide 120 AIO. There was space for two fans on the top of the case already, so I mounted the radiator to the top inside of the case, then mounted the fans on top of the case in a pull configuration. This gave me enough clearance to put the new MB in place. I had to customize the mount, because the old fan spacing didn't match the radiator, and also needed to drill a new hole and put a grommet to bypass the fan cables into the case. Very satisfactory result.
So I started doing some digging bc my pc does not match the image of what I paid for. Luckily the pc was advertised with the radiator being installed basically upside down. This channel is my favorite source to figure out things I should have known before making my purchases BUT all these videos are helping me learn not only what is in my pc but how they should be installed how to install tear down etc. thank you for all of your work and research!
@@M4Inchan if they are trash then explain why they are so popular and widely used? If they were trash them multiple people would be complaining about them and they wouldn't be so popular
i literally just ordered a Corsair H115i Pro before watching this... this will be the first time i'm putting any liquid in a computer other than thermal compound.
I was able to fit a 240 corsair aio on the top of a corsair 220t case with about a mm of room to spare between the ram, vrms and fans. I love how it turned out. Everything is so closely packed together and it looks so good.
No matter what, I always come back to Jayz channel and videos, because Jay explains is simply, and practically. To me that's efficient and doesn't require the over explanation that other video content people offer. (If I wanted that I'd go watch Linus for an hour.. lol.) I'm over here like, "I need to OC my new 9700K, what AIO do I need?... Oh, Jayz got me. Here I am. Thank you Jay!
I recently purchased the H100i Pro. After using a Cryorig C7 low profile cooler for my i5-6600K (not overclocked) for a while, I figured the H100i would be mostly eye candy. Instead my load temps went from 65c to 37c. Such a massive jump for my CPU, it's insane. When I finally get around to OCing my CPU, I've got tons of headroom to work with because of that AIO.
Love your videos, man. The content, the editing, the little onscreen explanations, jokes, everything. For me, it makes the content interesting, catchy, funny and many other things beside being informative. You guys go far and beyond when it comes to providing quality content. Keep up the excellent fucking work you are doing.
+1 for the Gentle Typhoons!!! They outperform every other fan I've tried in terms of both temps AND noise when cooling off my 7700k @ 5.1 gHz with a 240mm AIO
Great video Jay and loving the new set. Would love to see a more in-depth video on air flow as AIO’s are only part of the overall system and how these interact with different methods of cooling.
@Daniel Plainview If you have a good aio with good thermal headroom you can also use it with the fans going 10% because it takes a long time to thermal throttle with an aio i think ltt oder Dawid doesTech Made an video about running an aio without the Air cooling just the aio it did very well
For me, pull works better. H500m. I pull in from the top.
5 років тому+2
i got an old i7-920 slightly overclocked water cooled since day one of installation still running a comfortable 35-40 Celsius 24/7 with a single 120mm radiator from Corsair (i think it is the H50 or something similar). no hick-ups in the last 9 years. so i can confirm the stability over time for AIOs. and finally, i love your videos as they're very educational and funny to watch - thanks man :-)
When it comes to AIOs I personally use a H100i with Noctua fans. If I need more cooling I use the industrial fans that are black and brown, but under normal circumstances the cream and brown fans are perfect. The EK Vardar fans are great too (considering they are made for static pressure) and so are the Corsair ML (magnetic levitation) fans. I like the ML fans because they have a pretty good static pressure, they are quiet and they come with a 5 year warranty. Of all my builds over the past 18 or so years, fans are one of the first failure points within the first 3 years or so, so spend the extra money on good fans from reputable companies and save your system from overheating from a fan failure. Building a new system from the ground up is a lot more expensive than buying good fans to start off. Also, clean you dust filters regularly because dust getting into your fans is what causes them to fail most often (from my experience), plus it clogs airflow and can cause static electricity to build inside your case and that will quickly brick your board.
@@killerash13 "through"? You mean "throw"? Why should they throw it away? it is getting the job done. The old saying, if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it.
I completely believe you, no reason it shouldn't be able to. The h100-115 series can easily handle any high end i7 on the market. I had an undelidded i7-7700k which is known to run as an inferno at 4.8ghz running at 80°C in IBT and Prime95, after delid (my cpu had absolutely TERRIBLE TIM, replaced it with liquid metal) now getting 55°C under load at 5.0ghz in iBT and prime95 on one of the hottest chips to date.
I personally am using an H60 in combination with my i9 9900K simply because I’m not overclocking and will likely never truly push it to its TDP. This frees up the top and front fans to dump as much cool air into the case as possible.
Hardware Unboxed answered that question in one of their last QnA videos. Their experiences were more around 2 years. Would love to see Jay do a video on that.
Mine is 10 years old... that's right im still gaming on x58 chipset. I still think I can get a couple more years out of her. Edit: because the guy above me I leave my pc on 24/7 and game about 4-6 hours a day. With a reboot every 2days
I have this exact same cooler, it’s absolutely amazing I have never taken it off since 2012 and it still keeps i5 4690k below 70c in 2020, I’m sad I just upgraded my cpu but it’s going to my younger brother and will be put to good use.
I have both Corsair and Fractal Designs AIOs and both have worked well. I tend to favor the Fractal Celsius. No bloatware software control and a black color neutral design.
Finally a video that talks properly about AIOs - it would be great to do a video about what configuration these watercoolers can be used in, e.g. at the front, top, back - push and pull
I'm so glad you made this video. Just yesterday I was looking to see if the H60 would be sufficient for what I was running. Was gonna give my parts to someone else that was going to be rendering a lot and while I know my cooling isn't very good, it wasn't going to tax it like they were going to so was gonna see if a smaller, cheaper AIO would be good. Good timing, Jay!
After watching Linus' video on the new Corsair custom water cooling products, I decided to go custom water cooling. Planning on a new PC build next year.
You see, that was my mind set until I learned about all the maintenance and the number of headaches that come along with custom water. I just gonna go with the h100i, it will hold up fine
Does depend on use though for someone trying to squeeze out 4.9Ghz+ CPU’s then sure a bigger rad helps. I have my 8700k at 4.8Ghz and even with a 240mm radiator I rarely exceed 70’C because my fans are maxed out. I can’t hear anything when I have my headset on so fan noise is not an issue.
TheJamsplat I want to get the same CPU and overclock it to 4.6 GHz, but I’m confused because of the video made by Linus. By his test A normal fan is better than a water cooler in temperatures
@@foop8964 All depends on the environment of your case and the budget you have. An air cooler is usually your more cost effective option but when overclocking you might need some beefy fan to cool effectively and you will need to maintain your case(dust building up). AIO is the low noise, low maintainence option only having to replace the unit when you feel the temps are no longer stable (dust is less of an issue but you should still clean every 6-12months).
on the h150i pro that I own you plug the 3 fans power directly on the pump block, if you replace the base grey fans by RGB corsair you'll "only" have to wire the 3 rgb controls for them this doesn't mean that you lose control over them, they will show up in icue on the aio page and you can set each fan separately if for some reason you wanted that
After a few builds now with AIO's I've found 280mm rads to be the sweet spot for chips being pushed. But honestly, there are a few air coolers that are performing at the same level or in some cases better than AIO's. Most notably the Noctua NH-D15, which is almost half the price of my current Kraken X62.
I use a Noctua D15 and have for years now and am very satisfied with the quality and the couple of times I've contacted customer support for a different mounting bracket and additional fan they've been very responsive and helpful.
Cant go wrong with noctua. But some times you need watch. I'm thinkin going back in my ncase cuz starting to get hot with long sessions. But maybe just a thermal issue.
Noctua 15 beats the smaller AIOs in all tests I have seen. My old Schyte Ninja 3 cube heapipe cooler keep my 4,,7Ghz 8 Core Xeon running 230W under 85C when running all 8 cores 4,7Ghz 100% use... Also why do everyone mount their water cooler radiators inside the PC case? With water cooling you can mount them outside where you get better cooling and have no limit on size...
Lol, saw that video as well. He then has a video advertising for water cooling. He seems to follow the cash flow, to many ads and I even saw him doing an ad for some product while wating for another unrelated video to start....
Hello, I have one from Arctic. Arctic Liquid Freezer II 240. The CPU is Ryzen 5 3600, I have only set the game profile in BIOS to 4,2GHz. CPU sits on MSI B450 Tomahawk Max. Paired with 2x 8GB DDR4 3200MHz CL16 HyperX Predator. I am very satisfied. In idle 30-40°C. In max load was 72°C. I had 88°C in max load with stock cooler. I also have 4 more 120mm vents from Arctic. 1 for intake and 3 for exhaust. The rad is mounted in front of the case and vents are as intake. Arctic has simply connection, just connect to CPU_FAN and that's it. I have been mounting one from Corsair for friend of mine. And a lot of wires are leading from cooler. I had to read the manual which wire to connect to. You do great job. Nice videos.
Thanks for this. Ive been looking into getting into water cooling with my new build, and I know AIO's are the best first step into it. Looking to actually OC my Ryzen 7 2700X thats currently sitting at stock speeds with the stock cooler.
I bought an original H100i back in 2014 and I really enjoyed it. I used it to overclock my FX 8320 to 4.56ghz in an attempt to push some more use out of it. That cooler went out on me late last year(evap through the rubber tubes? It sounded all sloshy inside), so I got a H100i Pro from Best Buy for 110$(cheaper than my original I got from NewEgg haha). I have since upgraded and I use it on my R7 2700X. It keeps me cool and while on full load I don't get over 65c on non-overclocked 2700X. I would recommend it. 👍🏻 EDIT: something I would like to add is that when I had the rad fans set to output the air the PC acted as a space heater in my small room. I have switched them to intake and the heat output is now low enough my room doesn't get hot. There is now a nice positive pressure inside the case, too. The case gets warm to the touch. My GPU is unaffected by this, I was worried at first about this. I also have it mounted slightly to the side. I have a honeycomb patter on the top of my case. As you mentioned my Gigabyte Aorus board has a large VRM heatsync and it interferes with my rad, I just shifted the radiator to mount in the honeycomb instead of the fan mounting holes. It works just as it would normally, but is slightly offset when I take off the side panel.
When I purchased my H60, the dudes at Microcenter scoffed at the "uselessness" of my choice for an entry level AIO. I was able to fit it comfortably in my old and cramped NZXT Vulcan MicroATX case and OC my 3570k to 4.5 GHz @ 1.256V without ever getting above 73°C during prime95 stress tests. Keeping this 2012 build chugging along in 2019 is a win in my book. AIO's are a clean and simple solution.
I would love a video that focuses on building af silent computer, how important is the individual fans?.. AIO vs fan for CPU, what about all the other fans? Thank you for all the great content you make!
You know, years ago Linus made a series of videos on a whole-room watercooling project. As you may have expected, he completely bungled it up in every possible way. I'm interested in the idea of infrastructural watercooling, since being able to exhaust heat outside would be an amazing thing in the summer months. Any chance you could give it a shot? In less absurd requests, could you recommend some cases with lots of clearance for mounting radiators and maintaining the system?
280 mm radiators are comparable to 360s not 240s. Surface areas are 288, 392 and 432 sq.cm for the 240. 280 and 360 respectively, which makes the 280 36% larger than the 240 and only 10% smaller than the 360.
nappydrew - working at Asetek, I can tell you that they did indeed change it ;) whether it is the same that’s in the Platinum series, I wouldn’t know :) But it is CoolIT :)
You are really good to explain things. THANK YOU JAY. I have used my Liquid freezer II 120 from Arctic for different Ryzen cpu´s. 1600af, 1700X and now my new 5600G. Have worked just fine - both acustic and performance wise - no reason form e to buy bigger ones. The 1700X was overclocked to near 4ghz without problems.
Personally I would say the size of watercooler depends on the square footage of your office and maybe the amount of coworkers you have
Under rated comment deserves more up votes.
Damn fine comment
This is beautiful
@R J what about the weight of mice per month?
@@marcleblanc3225 I see you are a reddit man
12:19 "In terms of priority, it is making sure you get the largest size that will fit into your chassis comfortably." My sister has been living by this mantra for years.
Damn.
i'm confused, i'm seeing this as a dirty joke. Is that a dirty joke?
I need to know, I can't sleep because of this.
Hyokins “What are you doing StepBro?”
Oh, trust us...we know. =)
@@GentlyUsedFrog lmao
1:01 was that sound an editing mistake? because it scared the shit out of me
Yeah, blame Phil :P
I fell off my bed
Glad I’m not the only one
Yeah me too, i were suprised.
lol i thought i was hearing stuff lol god dammit phil
being hearing impaired is almost a blessing when it comes to high end pc hardware, i can run my fans full blast without being bothered lmao
Andrew Fowler tbh even with perfectly functioning hearing with headphones on you can barely hear it
Maybe I got lucky but even at 100% rpm on all fans with my 360mm aio my PC is near silent. Until the 1080ti ramps up to 100% that is.
@@kylequinn1963 damn thats awesome, i wouldnt know but my brother tells me my pc sounds like an airplane taking off 😂😅
@@kylequinn1963 what aio :)?
I have Hyperacusis so i’m the opposite and it’s awful, Good thing is that i’ve been able to train my ears to be better.
5:16 Size doesn't matter, you just need the right technique on how to put it in.
Haha
Lol
Rude xD
Ahh ein Spion von Klixtra aha :D
Sanic The Hedge Hawk Klixtra ist auch nice
I LOVE THIS. I literally posted on your old rad guide about u making a new video, and tweeted you about it - and TWO DAYS LATER you post this. Amazing. Swear you are the best ever
I've had the same Corsair H100i for almost 5 years for my overclocked 6700K and it still runs and cools like a dream. I have reapplied thermal paste once or twice but am still a VERY happy AIO customer.
I have had the same cooler and CPU for the same period of time and never seen temps over 41c under load. Never reapplied thermal paste either :)
Have you ever replaced the fans on it?
@@fiercebon14 I swapped the fans on day 1 when I got it to the corsair maglift fans vs the ball bearing ones they came with. (the ML 120's) Plus, they came in color vs just black or grey. the ML 120's still work great to this day.
Wow I can’t wait to add this to my chromebook
Why stop there? Install a car radiator to your chromebook! It will make it very cool.
Or better yet, operate your chromebook inside a freezer room!
Were you thinking about intake or outtake? I have my radiator drilled into the bottom of my chrome book to draw in cool air
🤣🤣🤣
😂😂
01:01 what the hell was that sound effect?
@João M. obviously. the platform.
Obviously. It's jayz's true alien form...
think it was music that was meant to be muted during recording got unpaused
Jay said "blame Phil"
it was software
Never thought I'd hear the name Gentle Typhoon again in 2019. Those were legendary fans.
I have some been spinning away for years and are as silent as the day i got them, i was going to buy the h150 and was wondering if they'd out perform the supplied corsair fans?
@@addz17 Kinda. The fans they include are low RPM, and the radiator is optimized for low RPMs(low airflow restriction, sub-30mm thickness). Meaning it gets almost no scaling from more airflow/static pressure.
As you get thicker/more restrictive radiators(like 60mm+ thickness or very high FPI rads), you want something like EK Varder EVOs, Noctua 12x25, or gentle typhoons.
I remember when I had my FX9590. I used a pond pump and fish tank to keep that thing cool.
i'm still using a 9590 had to downclock to 4ghz to keep cool my vrm's were being raped
@@bubbabo2308 If there's one thing, they double as a space heater.
Even underclocked mine still acts like a space heater. It's so sad xD I'm gonna build some water chiller contraption when I can. Formula Z board gets waaaay too hot, and then just dies. Stability eludes me
@@dangstalker I used a Gigabyte 990FXA UD3 and the vrms didn't get that hot surprisingly. It was a very solid board. The processor however, I could cook a meal on but joking aside it was a half decent processor for its time even if it did run a little hot.
@@LordPoshnameVonPlumbingparts When it runs, it's cool, but I've spent years on this thing and can't afford to swap parts yet, maybe someday!
I recently went from aio's to full custom loops. I don't think i'll ever look back. And yes, it's all because of you Jay!! Thank you!
Loving the new set. Nice to see you stocking up corsair products on the back shelves for this vid Kappa
yeah i like corsair too /s
zJager Kappa?
#corsairarmyhere
@@theguymaxqc its a twitch.tv chat meme
I'm a big Corsair fan. Lovin' my 250D case.
120 : Normal AIO
240 : OverClock
360 : Quiet
Yes
@@justint.6618 Fake ass Justin
Anthony Thomas fake Anthony
I have a 120 and i overclocked to 4.8ghz
Zenma what cpu? 9700k?
I reused my old coolermaster case with the double wide 120 AIO. There was space for two fans on the top of the case already, so I mounted the radiator to the top inside of the case, then mounted the fans on top of the case in a pull configuration. This gave me enough clearance to put the new MB in place. I had to customize the mount, because the old fan spacing didn't match the radiator, and also needed to drill a new hole and put a grommet to bypass the fan cables into the case. Very satisfactory result.
The proper JayzTwoCents title would be "What size is right for you"
It's not the size of the AIO but the motion of the....
@@EddieLynn pump
ladies...
@Jorus C'baoth I love how you put NZXT in its own category when they use the exact same pumps as corsair.
I love your videos, you inspired me to build my first PC and water cool it. Keep up the awesome work.
12:18 - short and simple answer you guys want
So I started doing some digging bc my pc does not match the image of what I paid for. Luckily the pc was advertised with the radiator being installed basically upside down. This channel is my favorite source to figure out things I should have known before making my purchases BUT all these videos are helping me learn not only what is in my pc but how they should be installed how to install tear down etc. thank you for all of your work and research!
I have a grow tent and an exhaust fan in my office. Sound from cpu fans is almost unnoticed. Love your channel!
The Platinum series from Corsair is made by Cool-IT and not Asetek btw. The Cool-IT pumps are meant to perform better
Doesn't really matter when the corsair fans are still trash.
@@M4Inchan Preach brother! Waiting on the blacked out new fans from Noctua to replace all of mine
@@copy.4123 How is it meant to perform better? :)
@@M4Inchan The ML Pro series are a lot better than the others.
@@M4Inchan if they are trash then explain why they are so popular and widely used? If they were trash them multiple people would be complaining about them and they wouldn't be so popular
Bismarck is looking good on the new set! Ever thought of doing a video about modeling?
How long would one last
He wrote on his instagram once that he won't do any videos about modeling even tho he's quite good at it.
ua-cam.com/video/_RTuaqL-eD4/v-deo.html I cant help myself I see Bismark I gotta share this.
King of the ocean
i literally just ordered a Corsair H115i Pro before watching this... this will be the first time i'm putting any liquid in a computer other than thermal compound.
I was able to fit a 240 corsair aio on the top of a corsair 220t case with about a mm of room to spare between the ram, vrms and fans. I love how it turned out. Everything is so closely packed together and it looks so good.
I can’t cut mine on top or front with new gpu so now gotta look at a 120mm one on the back as exhaust
No matter what, I always come back to Jayz channel and videos, because Jay explains is simply, and practically. To me that's efficient and doesn't require the over explanation that other video content people offer. (If I wanted that I'd go watch Linus for an hour.. lol.)
I'm over here like, "I need to OC my new 9700K, what AIO do I need?... Oh, Jayz got me.
Here I am.
Thank you Jay!
Quit lying man, I see you over on Greg Salazar's channel way more than here
I recently purchased the H100i Pro. After using a Cryorig C7 low profile cooler for my i5-6600K (not overclocked) for a while, I figured the H100i would be mostly eye candy. Instead my load temps went from 65c to 37c. Such a massive jump for my CPU, it's insane. When I finally get around to OCing my CPU, I've got tons of headroom to work with because of that AIO.
I can't wait to see the Corsair Hydro X build. :)
@Cemil are you stupid
@Cemil tbh any fan is good for a radiator. Back before static pressure fans were a thing we had to use regular fans on out radiators
@Cemil yes they are good
Yeet
"Making sure you get the largest size that will fit in your chassis comfortably". So that's how it works.
Love your videos, man. The content, the editing, the little onscreen explanations, jokes, everything. For me, it makes the content interesting, catchy, funny and many other things beside being informative. You guys go far and beyond when it comes to providing quality content. Keep up the excellent fucking work you are doing.
+1 for the Gentle Typhoons!!! They outperform every other fan I've tried in terms of both temps AND noise when cooling off my 7700k @ 5.1 gHz with a 240mm AIO
Great video Jay and loving the new set. Would love to see a more in-depth video on air flow as AIO’s are only part of the overall system and how these interact with different methods of cooling.
Thanks, I’m gonna go with the biggest boy!. I have hyper sensitive hearing so i want the least noise from my computer as possible :)
@Daniel Plainview ?
@Daniel Plainview If you have a good aio with good thermal headroom you can also use it with the fans going 10% because it takes a long time to thermal throttle with an aio i think ltt oder Dawid doesTech Made an video about running an aio without the Air cooling just the aio it did very well
@Daniel Plainview yeah I think it's all both very quiet but she/he bought it like 1 year ago so nvmd
Looking forward to a definitive breakdown on push vs pull configurations controlling for ambient temperature and fan types.
Seth Larson me too man. Hopefully he’ll be able to answer a lot of the rumors floating around lol
For me, pull works better. H500m. I pull in from the top.
i got an old i7-920 slightly overclocked water cooled since day one of installation still running a comfortable 35-40 Celsius 24/7 with a single 120mm radiator from Corsair (i think it is the H50 or something similar). no hick-ups in the last 9 years. so i can confirm the stability over time for AIOs. and finally, i love your videos as they're very educational and funny to watch - thanks man :-)
When it comes to AIOs I personally use a H100i with Noctua fans. If I need more cooling I use the industrial fans that are black and brown, but under normal circumstances the cream and brown fans are perfect. The EK Vardar fans are great too (considering they are made for static pressure) and so are the Corsair ML (magnetic levitation) fans. I like the ML fans because they have a pretty good static pressure, they are quiet and they come with a 5 year warranty. Of all my builds over the past 18 or so years, fans are one of the first failure points within the first 3 years or so, so spend the extra money on good fans from reputable companies and save your system from overheating from a fan failure. Building a new system from the ground up is a lot more expensive than buying good fans to start off. Also, clean you dust filters regularly because dust getting into your fans is what causes them to fail most often (from my experience), plus it clogs airflow and can cause static electricity to build inside your case and that will quickly brick your board.
Still using a H110i GTX from the previous series of Corsair to cool down a 4790K OC at 4.9 Ghz. Believe me or not it's still getting the job done.
Just through it away already.
@@killerash13 "through"? You mean "throw"? Why should they throw it away? it is getting the job done. The old saying, if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it.
I completely believe you, no reason it shouldn't be able to. The h100-115 series can easily handle any high end i7 on the market. I had an undelidded i7-7700k which is known to run as an inferno at 4.8ghz running at 80°C in IBT and Prime95, after delid (my cpu had absolutely TERRIBLE TIM, replaced it with liquid metal) now getting 55°C under load at 5.0ghz in iBT and prime95 on one of the hottest chips to date.
I personally am using an H60 in combination with my i9 9900K simply because I’m not overclocking and will likely never truly push it to its TDP. This frees up the top and front fans to dump as much cool air into the case as possible.
How about the temperature peformance?
Can you do a video on the longevity of aio coolers? Thanks !
Typically around 3-5 years
@@yurrpitsTy no i would say 2 to 3 years and 4 is the maximum
Hardware Unboxed answered that question in one of their last QnA videos. Their experiences were more around 2 years. Would love to see Jay do a video on that.
Mine is 10 years old... that's right im still gaming on x58 chipset. I still think I can get a couple more years out of her.
Edit: because the guy above me I leave my pc on 24/7 and game about 4-6 hours a day. With a reboot every 2days
7 years, still rocking.
Jay the new set is really very relaxing , it has such a inviting look. Thank for all of your hard work.
My Cosair H55 has been running non-stop since 2010.
don't lie
you pry have like 2 droplets of liquid leftn
I have this exact same cooler, it’s absolutely amazing I have never taken it off since 2012 and it still keeps i5 4690k below 70c in 2020, I’m sad I just upgraded my cpu but it’s going to my younger brother and will be put to good use.
Jay I have asked for a long time you benchmark radiator scaling in an open loop to show how cooling potential scales. This would be the perfect time
I would be interested in this as well!
Crazy how I started researching AIOs and you uploaded a video.
@@anon-y8w He knows *all*
Same, I've been researching them and trying to decide what case and fans to choose all day literally for like 12+ hours.
I have both Corsair and Fractal Designs AIOs and both have worked well. I tend to favor the Fractal Celsius. No bloatware software control and a black color neutral design.
Wow that is amazing! I mean what are the chances of someone out there researching AIOs and coming across a video of just that? WOW!
@@toriawelsh7274 Wow an asshole. Never thought I'd see one with my own eyes. Amazing find.
me thinking I'm insane hearing a small jingle thing
me replaying the video and realizing that its just there
Finally a video that talks properly about AIOs - it would be great to do a video about what configuration these watercoolers can be used in, e.g. at the front, top, back - push and pull
I'm so glad you made this video. Just yesterday I was looking to see if the H60 would be sufficient for what I was running. Was gonna give my parts to someone else that was going to be rendering a lot and while I know my cooling isn't very good, it wasn't going to tax it like they were going to so was gonna see if a smaller, cheaper AIO would be good.
Good timing, Jay!
1:01 that scared the crap outta meh(the random sound)
Sound hiccup. :P
I was just staring at that 2080ti Kingpin in the back🤤
set is looking good Jay
you mean my 5 rads in my case are a waste???? lol
this dude is the Garand Thumb of PC gaming.
A 120x240mm vs 140x280mm vs 120x360mm aio video would be well received. I personally believe that the 280mm is the "sweet spot" vs the 240mm.
Jay and sizes...
Name a more iconic duo.
Yeah, I'll wait
linus and sizes xD
I was looking into some Custom Loops instead of AIO but it is sooo expensive.
EK does sell kits
I see the terror of the seas.
The Bismarck and the Kriegsmarine
2000 men and 50 000 tons of steel.
Sabaton, fuck yeah
@@rockytom5889 set a course for the Atlantic with the allies on their heel!
@@Osean_Kitty
Firepower,firefight
@@rockytom5889 Battle Stations, keep the targets steady in sight
Great video, Jay! LOVING the new set!!!
After watching Linus' video on the new Corsair custom water cooling products, I decided to go custom water cooling. Planning on a new PC build next year.
You see, that was my mind set until I learned about all the maintenance and the number of headaches that come along with custom water. I just gonna go with the h100i, it will hold up fine
So have you bought your pc already?
I didnt end up upgrading until this year. Didnt go with a custom loop, its just too expensive. @jantski5084
That 280mm needed to be included in this review :o/
Thanks for the video.
I wish the H150i Pro would come in the Platinum version
White 360mm is needed only enermax
Easy answer... Largest you can fit in your case. Lower temps & Lower noise.
Does depend on use though for someone trying to squeeze out 4.9Ghz+ CPU’s then sure a bigger rad helps. I have my 8700k at 4.8Ghz and even with a 240mm radiator I rarely exceed 70’C because my fans are maxed out. I can’t hear anything when I have my headset on so fan noise is not an issue.
TheJamsplat I have like 20-30dB of noise in my case, with all fans (if i open it’s maybe 40dB) but i still get irritated by it.
Like 3 fans and one of the are the cpu cooler xD
TheJamsplat I want to get the same CPU and overclock it to 4.6 GHz, but I’m confused because of the video made by Linus. By his test A normal fan is better than a water cooler in temperatures
@@foop8964 All depends on the environment of your case and the budget you have. An air cooler is usually your more cost effective option but when overclocking you might need some beefy fan to cool effectively and you will need to maintain your case(dust building up). AIO is the low noise, low maintainence option only having to replace the unit when you feel the temps are no longer stable (dust is less of an issue but you should still clean every 6-12months).
I have an H80i v2 and I love it. Never understood why it's not more popular.
3:00 thank you for clarifying the 9900K being ok with a 120mm on stock
Asymptotic. I haven't seen that word since my college days.
Edit: Dear Zeenies, I'm a GenX'er. Now get off my lawn!
shut up boomer
Ok boomer
🅱️oomer
I think they wanted to say that it would be an exponential decay when comparing the number of fans against its effectiveness.
The problem is it's actually logarithmic. . .
Exponential effort for incremental increase.
Nooo Jay! You should have reviewed the 140mm Fans as well!!!
My question Jay is, should a person stick with the fans that come with the AIO or would you suggest to changing them out?
www.amazon.com/dp/B00650P2ZC?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
If that shared correctly. Nactua makes amazingly great and quiet fans.
Warranty matters as well. My corsair h110i is now 4years old and only had to replace the fans. Still running 100%.
on the h150i pro that I own you plug the 3 fans power directly on the pump block, if you replace the base grey fans by RGB corsair you'll "only" have to wire the 3 rgb controls for them
this doesn't mean that you lose control over them, they will show up in icue on the aio page and you can set each fan separately if for some reason you wanted that
Let's see some FLIR footage of each rad at different loads!
After a few builds now with AIO's I've found 280mm rads to be the sweet spot for chips being pushed. But honestly, there are a few air coolers that are performing at the same level or in some cases better than AIO's. Most notably the Noctua NH-D15, which is almost half the price of my current Kraken X62.
I use a Noctua D15 and have for years now and am very satisfied with the quality and the couple of times I've contacted customer support for a different mounting bracket and additional fan they've been very responsive and helpful.
I just finally noticed that you're using the new set. Your previous videos using it I had zero clue lol.
Last year around September, I bought my first AIO, an H100i, by and large influenced by videos from Jay. I'm never looking back, again.
Interesting. I always was of the opinion I needed the bigger sized radiators. Thank you Jayz.
But Linus said to buy a Noctua!?
Cant go wrong with noctua. But some times you need watch. I'm thinkin going back in my ncase cuz starting to get hot with long sessions. But maybe just a thermal issue.
Noctua 15 beats the smaller AIOs in all tests I have seen. My old Schyte Ninja 3 cube heapipe cooler keep my 4,,7Ghz 8 Core Xeon running 230W under 85C when running all 8 cores 4,7Ghz 100% use... Also why do everyone mount their water cooler radiators inside the PC case? With water cooling you can mount them outside where you get better cooling and have no limit on size...
Lol, saw that video as well. He then has a video advertising for water cooling. He seems to follow the cash flow, to many ads and I even saw him doing an ad for some product while wating for another unrelated video to start....
I have the Corsair H150i PRO in Push/Pull configuration. Keeps my 9700k icy cool. its a bit over kill though.... but that's what i like about it.
mine is in push pull, replacing it with an air cooler for same performance
@@zooker2185 ecuse me? Noooo
@@zooker2185 the aio is better and is far more silent
@@oof5882 i have an h150i
@@oof5882 i get around the same perf as the drp4 or d15 with much more noise
The gentle typhoon is back AP-15 on Amazon
Hello, I have one from Arctic. Arctic Liquid Freezer II 240. The CPU is Ryzen 5 3600, I have only set the game profile in BIOS to 4,2GHz. CPU sits on MSI B450 Tomahawk Max. Paired with 2x 8GB DDR4 3200MHz CL16 HyperX Predator. I am very satisfied. In idle 30-40°C. In max load was 72°C. I had 88°C in max load with stock cooler. I also have 4 more 120mm vents from Arctic. 1 for intake and 3 for exhaust. The rad is mounted in front of the case and vents are as intake. Arctic has simply connection, just connect to CPU_FAN and that's it. I have been mounting one from Corsair for friend of mine. And a lot of wires are leading from cooler. I had to read the manual which wire to connect to. You do great job. Nice videos.
The biggest one that can fit your case 😁
Size doesn't matter, it's all about the technique... Atleast that's what she said
Thanks for this. Ive been looking into getting into water cooling with my new build, and I know AIO's are the best first step into it. Looking to actually OC my Ryzen 7 2700X thats currently sitting at stock speeds with the stock cooler.
Me when im going all out on a liquid cooler: I just want the one with 3 fans not 2 or 1 3!
I bought an original H100i back in 2014 and I really enjoyed it. I used it to overclock my FX 8320 to 4.56ghz in an attempt to push some more use out of it. That cooler went out on me late last year(evap through the rubber tubes? It sounded all sloshy inside), so I got a H100i Pro from Best Buy for 110$(cheaper than my original I got from NewEgg haha). I have since upgraded and I use it on my R7 2700X. It keeps me cool and while on full load I don't get over 65c on non-overclocked 2700X. I would recommend it. 👍🏻
EDIT: something I would like to add is that when I had the rad fans set to output the air the PC acted as a space heater in my small room. I have switched them to intake and the heat output is now low enough my room doesn't get hot. There is now a nice positive pressure inside the case, too. The case gets warm to the touch. My GPU is unaffected by this, I was worried at first about this. I also have it mounted slightly to the side. I have a honeycomb patter on the top of my case. As you mentioned my Gigabyte Aorus board has a large VRM heatsync and it interferes with my rad, I just shifted the radiator to mount in the honeycomb instead of the fan mounting holes. It works just as it would normally, but is slightly offset when I take off the side panel.
When I purchased my H60, the dudes at Microcenter scoffed at the "uselessness" of my choice for an entry level AIO. I was able to fit it comfortably in my old and cramped NZXT Vulcan MicroATX case and OC my 3570k to 4.5 GHz @ 1.256V without ever getting above 73°C during prime95 stress tests. Keeping this 2012 build chugging along in 2019 is a win in my book. AIO's are a clean and simple solution.
How long does it typically take for an aio's fluid to evaporate out?
Well, Corsair has a warranty for 5 years
I think that it would last 5+ years. It'd probably last just a tad longer than the warranty.
I have been using my Corsair H55 since January 2014 and it still cools just as well as it ever did. My PC is almost always on too.
I would love a video that focuses on building af silent computer, how important is the individual fans?.. AIO vs fan for CPU, what about all the other fans?
Thank you for all the great content you make!
Tariro10000 as i learned, you will always hear the pump then :) So in that case a dual fan air cooler is the most quiet
You know, years ago Linus made a series of videos on a whole-room watercooling project.
As you may have expected, he completely bungled it up in every possible way.
I'm interested in the idea of infrastructural watercooling, since being able to exhaust heat outside would be an amazing thing in the summer months. Any chance you could give it a shot?
In less absurd requests, could you recommend some cases with lots of clearance for mounting radiators and maintaining the system?
I am grooving the new set Jay! Bedroom set works well for this kind of content..
280 mm radiators are comparable to 360s not 240s. Surface areas are 288, 392 and 432 sq.cm for the 240. 280 and 360 respectively, which makes the 280 36% larger than the 240 and only 10% smaller than the 360.
The H115i Platinium is not an ASETEK
CoolIT FTW
This video is the definition of two cent.
"Buy the biggest one you can fit in your case"
You didn't include the asetek 645lt, the only 92mm aio on the market!
6:20 the graph you're looking for is logarithmic... asymptotic just means it approaches a point but never touches... it's usually zero.
got a h100i rgb platinum
The 115 platinum is NOT an Asetek pump.
Neither is the H60, at least the one on camera here ;)
@@dennishampe4465 Didn't know they changed that one, too. Does it also use a Cool-It pump?
nappydrew - working at Asetek, I can tell you that they did indeed change it ;) whether it is the same that’s in the Platinum series, I wouldn’t know :)
But it is CoolIT :)
@@dennishampe4465 Thanks, good to know.
1:02 was a huge editing fail :) ;)
who cares
I don't get it.
This is exactly what I needed 😌
literally just buy a noctua cooler.
You are really good to explain things. THANK YOU JAY. I have used my Liquid freezer II 120 from Arctic for different Ryzen cpu´s. 1600af, 1700X and now my new 5600G. Have worked just fine - both acustic and performance wise - no reason form e to buy bigger ones. The 1700X was overclocked to near 4ghz without problems.
You give so much information that at the end of the video I have no idea what I just watched.
0:47 to skip past the ad
It's always summer in Florida though.
Senpai Oreo come to PSL is been 92F here 😂
that explains florida man
Whats up with the weird blum blum sound effect at about 1:01?
I run a 115i rgb pro on both my 2950x threadripper and my 5800x and it does an amazing job even overclocked
I got a triple sized one because I said I might as well go big or go home. Definitely don’t regret it