Система водяного охлаждения для процессора ID-COOLING ZoomFlow 240X — 509 отзывов, плюсы и минусы
509 отзывов пользователей о ID-COOLING ZoomFlow 240X
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Installed correctly, but I get a bit of hum noise. Might be typical - this is my first AIO. I have the white 360mm, top mounted, fans set to exhaust. Not terrible, just not the silent I was expecting when the fans are at very low RPM. My pump is under the rad, not installed in a way air can pocket at rad outlet, so it's not a gurgle. It's not bad, but coming from a truly dead silent build, I notice it in a quiet room.
I'm running an I5 7600K at 4.4GHz so not a real aggressive overclock (stock is 3.8GHz). Was getting 34°C idle, 70°C stress test on the hyper 212 air cooler. I used arctic silver 5 instead of the included thermal compound and after several days and heat cycles did stress testing. For just web surfing, watching videos, MS Office apps, general low-demand stuff, it pretty much stays max of upper 30's. Games I play aren't the latest, most demanding (I'm still on a GTX 1060), but haven't seen it much above 50°C for any normal/gaming use. Have to use synthetic benchmark stress tests to get it higher. So stress testing with Intel tuning app, OCCT, Passmark, etc, I can't get it over low 60's °C! Prime95 torture test is only thing I can heat my CPU up with now and even at that, mid-upper 60's °C is highest I can get in a 22°C room. This is the big take away - my overclocked CPU during long torture tests of 4 cores @ 100%, I can't even get it hot enough to turn the fans up! I'll see a single core spike to like 68°C for a second, but low-mid 60's running Prime95 for > an hour is what it sustains. Again, my first AIO or attempt at liquid cooling so i don't know that compares to big name brands, but I'm very pleased with it.
Based on reviews here talking about it falling off, I removed the thin black ID Cooling sticker before install. Can't see it in my case anyway. But it seemed stuck on fine. Otherwise, packaged well, no leaks, included hardware is nice & plentiful, fan wires are generous length, rgb works as expected with included controller (I don't have mobo aRGB header), slight hum at low speeds but not a hair dryer at max RPM.
I added a few pics. One shows the pump oriented 90° from initial install which i thought might help the hum noise (it didn't). Others show real results during stress tests. The way the pump bracket works, you can orient the pump any way you want. I will note looking thru review pictures some are showing it mounted incorrectly and the instructions don't really tell you NOT to do it wrong. You want it so the pump isn't highest part of the loop AND the inlet/outlet of the rad isn't highest either. You will mostly see that with front mounts. Think about where the air (no AIO is 100% full of liquid with no air at all) bubble is going to rise to in the closed loop. If that is in the pump or at the inlet/outlet barbs of the radiator, it is installed wrong. Best case is it gurgles some, worst case is total failure. Anyway, hard to mess that up with top mount. For front mount, just think "mount it higher, hoses down" and it's fine. Most pics so far attached to thee reviews are correct, so you can scroll them and identify the "wrong" ones pretty easy.
I should note I did elect to install my radiator up front intaking cool from in front and venting the warmer air into my case. This results in the coolest CPU temps while only adding a few Cs to my 1070 GTX.
The RGB lights are pretty nice with (in my opinion) a very nice hue. Being my first AIO (and first experience with RGB headers) it took me a little bit to fully understand what I was doing but overall it was fairly straight forward.
**IMPORTANT**
When installing this AIO there is a mounting bracket that goes onto the pump (one for AMD one for Intel). In the instructions it states to line up the arrow on the pump with the arrow on the bracket. Make sure you do this as if the bracket is in the wrong orientation it MAY NOT SEAT RIGHT on the processor.
Also, be sure to have the fans facing the correct orientation so the airflow is either "pushing" or "pulling" air over the radiator.
I make mention of these two things because I messed up myself but luckily caught my mistake before I finished.
Side note, the trio fan pack with the RF controller did the same thing. They were both plugged into a SATA rail that is currently powering two SSD's so I don't think that it's the power supply or port it's plugged into.
The case is a phanteks P500A with the rgb fans that came with the case.
Update: after running an AIDA64 stress test at 100%, the Ryzen 7 3700X ran at 4.05 GHz precision boosted, topping out at 71 degrees Celsius. This is also without touching any fan or pump curves in bios. Also allowed for a push to a score of 4442 in Cinabench R20.
Can't believe all the wrong way people install AIO's. I installed this vertical and if mounting vertical. Then the tubes should be at the bottom and if not. Your probably getting water noise and definitely shortening the life of the cooler. Not too mention could over time cause a leak. When the air at the top of the radiator gets pushed by water being caught up to the pump. What do you think happens with the pressure?
Mount Correctly or your picture looks like you don't know what you are doing.
I am very impressed with how well this 360mm AIO cools my Ryzen 5600x. I used to get constant temps of 50-65+ C on the stock AMD wraith cooler, but now I never go above 40 C even after long sustained CPU use.
The fans are practically silent as well which is nice, can barely even hear them running.
My only complaint is the stupid black "ID Cooling Sticker", I woke up one morning after leaving my computer running and the sticker had fallen off the side of radiator and got stuck in between one of my case fans. Luckily didn't cause any damage but this could potentially lead to major issues if this had gotten stuck in an expensive GPU and was left running.
I would recommend just removing the sticker before installing it in your system. Once that adhesive heats up it will peel right off and the sticker could potentially do some costly damage to your system.
The processor cover light moves very slowly. It comes on for a second and then doesn't come back on for 10 seconds. Even though I have it set to pulse.
Edit: ok so they actually emailed me back and apparently they did make some upgrades that’s why the box and radiator looks different. Still disappointed that the newer radiator looks more like a downgrade than an upgrade.
Pump started making grinding noise a few days later after I emailed company. Have YET to hear back anything.
Save your time and money with this aggravation, now you know why it's $80. I liked the hose length. Sent back to AMZ, buy something else.
At first I thought it would sort itself out after a few hours, but as time goes on, I find that it isn’t getting better. It still keeps temps super low, but the noise is ridiculous.
I really do not want to uninstall the backplate to go back to my old cooler.






