120mm AIO Roundup: Testing Be Quiet, Corsair, Cooler Master, and Enermax models
The best overall cooler is Enermax’s LiqMaxFlo, offering balanced noise levels and a unique VRM fan. But Corsair’s H60x Elite is the quietest, and Be Quiet’s Pure Loop 120 cools the most watts.
Maximum Intensity Thermal Testing and Noise Levels
In the most intense workloads, AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X will reach its peak temperature of 95 degrees Celsius, and as a result will thermally throttle to a small degree with all but the strongest of liquid coolers. When the CPU reaches its peak temperature, I’ve measured the CPU package power to determine the maximum wattage cooled to best compare their performance.
Of the coolers tested here, Be Quiet’s was the strongest, cooling approximately 118W during the course of testing. Of course, that is only half of the picture – noise levels are equally important.
The noise levels have quite a bit of variance here. Corsair’s H60x had the most ideal noise levels, reaching only 38.2 dBA. Cooler Master’s 120L was the loudest, reaching 46.5 dBA! But when you consider both the thermal results and the noise results, Enermax’ LiqMaxFlo had the best showing overall, with the second-strongest cooling results paired with the second-quietest noise levels.
Thermal results with noise normalized to 37.3 dBA
Finding the right balance between fan noise levels and cooling performance is important. While running fans at full speed can improve cooling capacity to some extent, the benefits are limited and many users prefer a quiet system. With this noise-normalized test, I’ve set noise levels to 37.3 dBA. This level of noise is a low volume level that is slightly audible, but shouldn’t bother even the most noise-sensitive of users.
When the fans are manually tuned for low noise levels, Be Quiet lives up to its name, providing the best thermal dissipation in this noise-normalized test.
95W Cinebench results
For a CPU like AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X, common workloads won’t exceed 95W of power consumption – this is what you might expect from the most CPU-demanding games.
Be Quiet’s Pure Loop 120 again provided the best overall results heere, averaging only 78 C in our 23 C ambient temperature test setup. Noise results weren’t tested in this scenario, because they were essentially the same as the maximum noise results, due to the default fan curve.
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75W Cinebench results
The lowest power limit I’ve tested for these 120mm AIO coolers is 75W. This power level is more typical of what most users might see while running AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X. Most games will use around 70W, in my experience.
Thermals don’t really matter in this scenario. If Intel’s stock cooler fit onto an AM5 motherboard, it would even perform well enough here. That said, Be Quiet’s Pure Loop 120 again provided the best thermal results, with a CPU package temperature of 65C.
When noise levels are taken into account, however, Corsair’s H60x Elite and Enermax’ Liqmax Flo offer the best performance in common scenarios. Their volume levels measured only 36.4 dBA in this scenario – which is about as low as my noise meter can reliably measure.
Conclusion
If I were in the market for a 120mm AIO, my choice of the coolers tested would be Enermax’ LiqMaxFlo 120mm. While it doesn’t offer the absolute best thermal results in maximum intensity workloads, it offers an ideal combination of thermal performance and low noise levels. Additionally, the fan atop its CPU block will help keep your VRMs and RAM cool, which can be useful for systems with less-than-ideal airflow. And systems like that are exactly where you’re most likely to want to use a small AIO in the first place.
If you simply want the best thermal performance, get Be Quiet’s Pure Loop 120 – but it runs a little bit louder, it costs about $10 more than the competition, at $90. Users who want the quietest overall experience should consider Corsair’s H60x Elite, which when we wrote this was selling for $80.
Albert Thomas is a contributor for Tom’s Hardware, primarily covering CPU cooling reviews.
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Alvar "Miles" Udell Corsair iCue has been buggy the last few releases if using a custom fan curve, as it'd lock the fans to the lowest speed no matter the temperature, which was just fixed in the latest release of 5.11.96.Reply -
bit_user I had wondered about something, after seeing news about EKWB taking over Intel's Cryo Cooling:Reply
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/ekwb-takes-over-intels-discontinued-cryo-cooling-tech-adds-14th-gen-support-to-ek-delta-tec-waterblock
Are there any AIO coolers that incorporate TEC to reduce water temps to potentially below ambient? Putting it in the radiator seems like a way you could utilize Peltier cooling with less waste heat, and activate it only when really needed.
I've seen external chillers, but wondered whether anything like that was incorporated into radiators intended for internal mounting. -
tjvaldez01 Enermax's website doesn't show the LiqMaxFlow 120, only the LiqMaxFlo SR 120. Can you verify this is the LiqMaxFlo SR 120??Reply -
Albert.Thomas
This AIO isn't controlled by iCUE, it's controlled by PWMAlvar Miles Udell said:Corsair iCue has been buggy the last few releases if using a custom fan curve, as it'd lock the fans to the lowest speed no matter the temperature, which was just fixed in the latest release of 5.11.96.
Good catch. Indeed, it is the SR 120.tjvaldez01 said:Enermax's website doesn't show the LiqMaxFlow 120, only the LiqMaxFlo SR 120. Can you verify this is the LiqMaxFlo SR 120??
I've had similar thoughts. In theory, you'd want it to cool temperatures to just above ambient to avoid issues with condensation.bit_user said:I had wondered about something, after seeing news about EKWB taking over Intel's Cryo Cooling:
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/ekwb-takes-over-intels-discontinued-cryo-cooling-tech-adds-14th-gen-support-to-ek-delta-tec-waterblock
Are there any AIO coolers that incorporate TEC to reduce water temps to potentially below ambient? Putting it in the radiator seems like a way you could utilize Peltier cooling with less waste heat, and activate it only when really needed.
I've seen external chillers, but wondered whether anything like that was incorporated into radiators intended for internal mounting. -
bit_user
I think you can afford to go a little below ambient, if the feed hose is insulated. I expect the waterblock, itself, will stay at least at ambient.Albert.Thomas said:I've had similar thoughts. In theory, you'd want it to cool temperatures to just above ambient to avoid issues with condensation.
Whether it's just below or just above ambient, I think the main point is that there'd need to be a thermostat controlling the TEC, so the water doesn't get cooled too much (and the flipside is you don't want to needlessly burn power chilling the water when it's not necessary). If TEC kicks in pretty much only when the CPU is boosting, then I think we won't have to worry too much about below-ambient water temperatures.
Heh, the thermostat feature could be implied by calling it Variable TEC, or "VTEC", for short. Then, we could revive a whole generation of memes.
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m3city I always wonder, why is three no comparison to a stock air cooler? They are supposed to have capacity to cool at max power, sustained (assume that pc case itself has adequate cooling). What willa one gain for using liquid cooling - higher (meaningfull for gaming, encoding etc) performance? OC capacity?Reply -
vertuallinsanity Alvar Miles Udell said:Corsair iCue has been buggy the last few releases if using a custom fan curve, as it'd lock the fans to the lowest speed no matter the temperature, which was just fixed in the latest release of 5.11.96.
Do you have a link to a different, perhaps non-spoofed page? Something smells phishy..
The typo belows doesn't happen much (or for long) on (properly editor-reviewed) published sites for .com based companies. From the 5.12.97 release notes:
"• Background image will now display properly when using the 640x48 px window size". -
dave.rara66 Not sure that four products constitute a "roundup". The Arctic Liquid Freezer line has consistently trounced the competition for many years, at really competitive prices...Reply
Full disclosure: yes, I do own an Arctic cooler, but spent many hours reading reviews. That's why I went with their product. -
Albert.Thomas
*Five Coolers, Four Manufacturers ;)dave.rara66 said:Not sure that four products constitute a "roundup".
The Arctic Liquid Freezer II 120 was discontinued last year and I don't see a Liquid Freezer III 120 available anywhere yetdave.rara66 said:The Arctic Liquid Freezer line has consistently trounced the competition for many years, at really competitive prices...