Corsair H75 review -
Article
Introduction
In this review we test the Corsair H75 liquid cooler. The H75 features a 120 mm radiator that is a good 25mm but also was applied with two really silent low RPM fans, so you add this kit in a push-pull configuration. The end results is a LCS kit that cools pretty nicely, but remains absolutely silent.
Compared to the last generation of Hydro products Corsair changed the fan, tubing, pump and cooling blocks sizes. The H175 is a single 120mm fan based liquid cooling solution that offers cooling performance at the level of the more mainstream heat-pipe coolers in terms of cooling performance, as really it offers excellent performance for the money whilst remaining very silent. The Corsair Hydro H75 series again is easy on the eyes and has a relatively simple to manage installation, the product is compatible with AMD Socket AM2, AM3, FM1 and FM2 any modern AMD CPU really. All current Intel socket formats are covered too, so whether you have a LGA1155, LGA1156, LGA1366 or LGA2011 motherboard this product will fit / can be used. Two SP120L PWM 120 mm high static pressure fans as being used that can PWM towards 2,000 RPM yet produce only 31.4 dBA of noise. These Corsair kits Hydro coolers all come with a tool-free installation are pre-filled and maintenance-free. The warranty even lasts 5 years. Corsair mounted two 120 mm SP120L fans that can spin at a programmable speed ranging from 800 RPM to 2000 RPM. They can push up to 73 CFM, make up to 37.3 dBA of noise, and have a static pressure of 3.9 mm of water.
So let's have a peek at the Corsair H75 and then head onwards into the review where we'll put it to the test with a Core i7 3770K processor, which we'll overclock at two voltage levels as well to see how well this cooling solution can absorb and exhaust heat. We feel that the product is just a great product in combo with the severe hotness that are Sandy/Ivy Bridge and Haswell based processors.
In July, Corsair presented a new series of DDR5 memories: the Vengeance RGB DDR5. The available kits from the RGB edition have a frequency higher than the base 4800 MHz (5200-6600 MHz); the non-RGB version starts from 4800 MHz. We are checking the Corsair Vengeance RGB 6000 MHz CL36 DDR5 kit today. It's in the middle frequency in the series. We already had an opportunity (almost three years ago) to review the Vengeance (Pro) RGB series RAM, but it was for the DDR4; the frequency was 3200 MHz, and it received a "Top Pick" award, and also the Vengeance RGB Pro SL which had 3600 MHz frequency (with CL18) and got the "Approved" award. But let's focus back on the tested DDR5 kit.
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