In this round-up we are looking at seven air coolers that will work with pretty much any CPU. As you will see in our photos and video the coolers come in a variety of shapes and sizes, and the prices also cover a spread from about £20 all the way past £70. At the high end the Deepcool Assassin II costs more than a basic liquid cooler and takes up considerably more space around the CPU socket. Go to the other extreme and the Cryorig M9 is a compact tower that will fit inside your tower case with room to spare.
In this round-up we are looking at seven air coolers that will work with pretty much any CPU. As you will see in our photos and video the coolers come in a variety of shapes and sizes, and the prices also cover a spread from about £20 all the way past £70.
At the high end the Deepcool Assassin II costs more than a basic liquid cooler and takes up considerably more space around the CPU socket. Go to the other extreme and the Cryorig M9 is a compact tower that will fit inside your tower case with room to spare.
We have listed the seven coolers in alphabetical order and might we suggest that you watch the video before you dive into the words and photos for further details.
We tested the coolers using two families of CPU. These are AMD AM3+ and Intel LGA2011, while ignoring LGA115x. The reason is that the AMD FX-8370 has a TDP rating of 125W and the Intel Core i7-4820K has a TDP of 130W so you are safe to assume that any cooler that can control those two processors at stock clocks will have no trouble with a 91W Core i7-6700K. Spoiler alert, all of the coolers managed that task without too much difficulty.
So what about overclockers who want to go way, way beyond 120W? For AMD we swapped out the 125W FX-8370 for a 220W FX-9590 that Turbos to 5GHz and on the Intel front we overclocked the Core i7-4820K to 4.5GHz using 1.4V.
FX-9590 and overclocked Core i7-4820K drew about 270W at the wall socket when the CPU was loaded (about 100W more than the baseline tests) which provided all the heat we needed to test the coolers, in some instances beyond their limits.
Now let's take a closer look at each cooler.
KG, how could you not include the Noctua D15 in this roundup? Commonly known to be the best performer of the moment….
This..
It wasnt missed, this isnt meant to be a roundup of every high end cooler, many of which we have already reviewed. This is a look at an unusual selection of coolers that most people have missed. Its a little ‘off beat’ intentionally.
Yes, but more to the point it could have been used as a baseline to compare others relative performance 🙂
I’m happy not to have the D15 in as it’s price is very much a barrier to using it (as well as the weight!) – it’s good to see focus on other makes such as Cryorig.
Not a valid test of anything without a Noctua NH D15 at least as a baseline.