Отзывы о Кулер для процессора Cooler Master MasterLiquid ML360 RGB TR4 Edition
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However, I'm sure I could achieved better results with an air cooler, because:
Air coolers are pretty efficient. Even the right 20 dollar cooler can outperform most AIOs.
The heatsink plate on this AIO is rough as hell. It was not smooth to a mirror finish, it looks like a glacier ran over it. You'd think that if they bothered to build this and attach a water pump, a radiator and RGB they would also finish the plate properly. Nope. For that reason alone I don't recommend getting this.
Then, I was not able to mount the heatsink as I wanted to on my motherboard. I could only do 2 orientations. I could not put it all four because the cooler has an oval shape which rested on some nearby capacitors instead of touching the CPU.
And lastly, it required me to take out my motherboard to mount it to my LGA 15xx to install a backplate. It took me about 3 hours of putting it together and stress testing my PC to make it work with the micro ATX case I have. I chalk that up my special case (haha) which is notoriously difficult to cool properly but I don't think this the best the AIO world has to offer.
I didn't try the RGB because I didn't want the extra wires and it wasn't compatible with the ASUS 5v RGB header. Be aware of that, I don't consider a fault of this product, it seems ASUS are the ones behind the curve here.
Whilst in the process, I went ahead and ordered another brand because I just spent $1700 on a new PC Build and I wanted to use it. I eventually went back to Amazon and thankfully their support is wonderful and they gave me a full refund.
Honestly, never buying anything CoolerMaster again. It used to be a brand I recommended as an IT Professional, now I'm going to steer any customers away from them based off this experience.
I've only had it one day so I can't judge it on durability yet.
I'm installing it on a 5yo cpu with LGA 2011 V3 socket.
Installation was easy:
1. Install 2 brackets with 2 screws each to the pump assembly.
2. Find the correct double ended screws and install on your mobo.
3. Install the fans on the radiator with toolless thumbscrews. Nice touch.
4. Remove plastic film, add thermal paste (included) and install block on top of cpu with 4 provided screws. A 2nd person can help hold the radiator while you install the cpu block
5. Plug in pump to cpu1 header and fans into provided splitter which plugs into cpu2 (cpuopt) header
6. Plug in 3 rgb headers (optional) with included splitter.
Cooling is great, with games running at a cool 65C.
I tried max fan, and it does get loud, these aren't silent fans when on full power, but they're very quiet on ordinary load. I can run games cool without the fans spinning up. This of course depends on your fan configuration if you customize that.
Installation: To be honest looking at the little flip open book of instructions at first made my scratch my head. However after actually looking at it and following it, this install is very straight forward. Attach plate to back of board, setup mounting screws, attach cooler head, mount radiator and fans, done.
Performance: The performance is fantastic. Could you get better out of larger systems? I imagine so. Could you get worse out of smaller units? Most definitely. When it comes down to numbers though, it shines. As stated above I was idling around 50-55C and now I idle around 38-42C, an impressive drop. Gaming temps: 72C peak.
Noise: Extremely quiet. I have other case fans that most definitely make more noise than this cooler does, by a long shot. The only noise I really get out of it is the occasional sound of liquid moving, or whatever you wish to call it.
Appearance: Beautiful. The lights are crisp, can be turned down or off completely and you can cycle through various colors or stop at the typical RGB rainbow cycle.
TL;DR: Buy this cooler. It works extremely well, looks great, install is easy.
Edito 28 de Junio: A los 3 meses se rompió la base simplemente por que es de plástico(Lo único bueno fue que ya había apagado la cpu si no hasta el procesador se hubiera quemado).
Mandé el producto ya que autorizaron mi reemplazo y después de 5 días me contesto el distribuidor autorizado y hará el reemplazo de mi producto.
I was replacing an air cooler that just bugged me due to the size and because it looked like it was going to bend and rip my mother board in half with its weight. Also, the fan was always ramped up keeping the CPU cool enough. This was a nice equivalent water cooler. With the 120mm size, you are not looking insane cooling numbers, a little better than air, but WAY quieter. Pump is silent. I couldn't fit a radiator bigger in my case, so such is life.
A few notes:
Comes with a LED splitter which works great with my Asus maximus 9 MB. Needed to start up the Aura software and then it was working immediately when choosing the LED header I used.
Pump and fan leads both work with the MB as well, if it needs more cooling, they increase in speed as needed.
LED is nice looking, clean and label free. Not as cool as a Kraken, but lit up so I like it.
Cooling is about as good as the air cooler at standard usage. Under stress though, this starts to shine a little. The air cooler peaked at 95c, this will not get past 83c. Larger radiators I'm sure would perform better. Plus my fan is in a slightly not ideal air flow location, but given normal use never crosses 60c I'm not worried about it.
UPDATE: Pump is fine, but after only a few weeks of use, the fan on the radiator is buzzing and off balance. Bearings didn't last at all. Had to go buy a third party fan which is ridiculous for brand new product. 4 stars to 3.
The pump is nice and quiet
BEFORE: Idle ~38C, Load 85-100C, Stress >100C (throttled)
AFTER: Idle ~26C, Load 40-55C, Stress 60-75C
Amazing. Installation was not too bad, took about 20-30 minutes. The fan makes some noise, but what do you expect, it's a fan.
I'll start with the only downside to this versus a fan & heatsink. It takes more space, and so a little more time to fit everything in place. With that being said, it's actually easier than I imagined it might be. I love that I was able to kind of wrap the excess wires around the fans and radiator to tuck them out of the way and out of sight. What I got was the ML240L RGB V2, and one of the most pleasant surprises about it is the fact that you can skip installing the RGB controller and all that mess that comes with it, if you have a motherboard that has RGB headers like my Asus. I think that's a feature that's new with the Version 2, and I LOVE it!
The whole thing is super quiet, compared to a fan & heatsink setup it's virtually silent. The lights are gorgeous. I'm using this on an Intel i7 10700k overclocked to 5.1 GHZ and it's truly magnificent, flawless even. (So far at least)
The full build:
CPU = Intel i7 10700k (with this CPU cooler obviously)
Motherboard = Asus TUF gaming Z490-Plus (wi-fi)
RAM = 64GB G Skill Ripjaws V
Video = Asus Nvidia RTX 2070
SSD = 1TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus
Chassis = Corsair Cyrstal 570X
PSU = EVGA 600BQ
Case Fans = 3x ThermalTake Riing RGB Plus Premium
+ keyboard, mouse, hard drives and other accessories
So is this cooler right for you? I believe if you have enough clearance above your motherboard to mount it there, then get this cooler, if not then don't even bother mounting it to the front with the tubes up, because over time you will get more noise and it won't get better.
In the end, I believe mine was broken but it is not most likely going to happen to you so if you like the cooler get it.
TLDR: Good AIO only if you can mount it on top, comes with everything including thermal paste but not a screwdriver, you need a Phillips screw. Mine was broken but not a bad cooler.
I set this as an exhaust and it cools like R5 3600 to around 35-45c idle, 60-70c gaming. Video encoding is around 70-75c.
The included fans are not that great IMO, it makes a buzzing noise. Don't think its defective since they both make buzzing noise. I replaced them with PCcooler "Bitwit" fans and they don't make noise and looks great.
The pump makes slight buzzing noise at 100%, i dropped my pump speed to 40% to extend it's life and there are 0 noise as a result. Dropping to 40% has a slight 1-2c difference.
If you are using an AMD CPU, make sure you have your AMD bracket that came with your motherboard. This AIO needs it to mount. Mounting is a bit of a pain and can be tricky, takes a while to get it in...overall wish they used a different mounting system.
Other issues i faced is that the screws can strip your screw hole pretty easily, try not to put too much force when tightening the screw.
I use extra cable to get one power from power supply and manually make one connector, thank you my EVGA power supply which I can remove unnecessary cables. It's like old days when we only use PATA devices, a lot of nostalgia during the process. But I can only supply power only (black and red, not white and green), guess I lost sensor or other control functions.
Hope CoolerMaster can make this part standard for all the products and never assume user have TWO CPU fan connectors, and there is no case fan connector on the motherboard too.
I switched from an air cooler to this AIO only because of my PC case size. The temperature improved, and the CPU (2950x) frequency was very stable when rendering for hours. If you just run Cinabench you will not see any meaningful difference.
A quick tip: if you are hearing noise coming from your case while using an AIO, try replacing metal screw with rubber pivots on your case fans. Sometimes oscillations and vibrations can cause unpleasant sounds.
*TLDR at the bottom
So far so good. The mounting system for the TR4 socket is made from a metal plate and is very sturdy and the water block is a heavy duty plastic with a good amount of thickness.
The other 1 star review showing photos of it looks as if when mounting this block they tighened one corner more than the rest therefore overstressing the material to break. Sure it's a product flaw but I had no issues being careful as to equalise the inital mounting, and then tighening.
The metal mount is very easy to line up, slot and tighten. The heat sink coverage is 100% on the cpu and was satisfied with the contact as it was smooth and even throughout.
The mounting screws for the 120mm fans was the most difficult as the stock fans didn’t line up to every screw hole on the radiator.
I tested the hole lineups of the stock fans and my own Corsair ML120 fans and nothing was awry so the radiator was the issue. Despite this I mounted all three fans on minus two screws, but the tightness was more than enough to stop any rattle.
This issue of the screw holes on the radiator also made it a pain to mount in my full tower as the supposed 120mm line up was off. Regardless I managed to put it on minus a few screws but enough to get solid stability. I never had either of these issues with my old Enermax TR4 (1st Gen).
(10/12 screws on for 3x Fans and about 6/12 for radiator mounting to case).
As for the cooling at stock on my 1950x threadripper. I’m hitting 33 degrees average on idle and playing a game (Rise of the tomb raider on ultra settings) for 20 minutes was hitting around 42-45 degrees.
Apart from installing the cooling system I’m very happy with the results for now.
TLDR:
Pros:
Silent pump
100% threadripper coverage.
Mounting is easy
nice cool temps idle and under load.
RGB lighting if you like shiny things.
Cons:
Installation of fans and mounting to case was hard only for the fact the radiator did not perfect spacing with the screw hole manufacturing.
Default fans are loud without mounting. Though radiators always generate noise because of the thin mesh so this point is to specifically refer to the fan itself.




