The Corsair Hydro X Custom Water Cooling Review, on a Ryzen 9 3950X
by Gavin Bonshor on February 5, 2020 9:00 AM ESTConclusion
Building our high-performance system with the Corsair Hydro X Series water cooling gear was no different to other loops in terms of difficulty. Anyone looking to build a loop with the Corsair Hydro X Series will need to make some considerations in terms of planning and setup, just like with any other loop. One thing users can benefit from is Corsair's Custom Cooling Configurator which allows users to input their hardware including motherboard, chassis, and graphics card. This allows users to pre-plan a loop based on what a particular chassis can accommodate in terms of radiators by recommended an optimal setting, or a higher-end loop for maximum performance.
Comparing the performance from default settings on our ASRock RX 5700 XT Taichi 8 GB and AMD Ryzen 3950X water-cooled system which we overclocked to 4.3 GHz on all cores, we saw the benefit in some areas and weakness in others. Benchmarks that used all 16-cores and 32-threads including our POV-Ray and Blender rendering tests saw the performance increases, but tests limited to single-core frequency lost out to the higher single-core boost frequencies.
Our ASRock X570 Aqua and Ryzen 3950X system water-cooled by Corsair Hydro X
Focusing on the cooling performance, and our Corsair Hydro X series loop does run 3°C cooler at default settings, and 5°C when our CPU is overclocked to 4.3 GHz compared to our ID-Cooling 240 mm Auraflow AIO cooler, which is already a high-performance off-the-shelf liquid cooling loop. This is one of the main caveats to custom water cooling loops; minimal thermal gains compared to cost. It should be noted that the difference between the ID-Cooling 240 mm AIO at stock settings and the Corsair Hydro X Series 240 mm custom loop was just 6°C which makes the custom solution look much better. Another thing to note is that our loop isn't just cooling the processor, but the hot running X570 chipset and the board's power delivery too, which of course would increase overall temperatures further. This makes the performance of the Corsair Hydro X Series even more impressive when taking this into consideration.
Below is the cost per part of the Corsair Hydro X series including a CPU block and GPU block if we would have used one:
Corsair Hydro X System Cost | ||||
Component | Product | Price in USD | ||
CPU Block | Corsair XC7 LGA115x/AM4 | $74.99 | ||
GPU Block | Corsair XG7 RX 5700 XT | $149.99 | ||
Pump/Reservoir | Corsair XD5 Pump/Reservoir | $154.99 | ||
Radiator | Corsair XR7 240 mm | $79.99 | ||
Fans | Corsair LL120 RGB 120 mm (triple pack) | $129.99 | ||
Fan Controller | Corsair Commander Pro RGB | $74.99 | ||
Fittings | Corsair Softline 10/13 mm Compression Fittings (four-pack) Corsair Rotary 90° Adapter (twin-pack) Corsair Rotary 45° Adapter (twin-pack) Corsair Ball Valve Corsair Fill Port |
$26.99 $26.99 $26.99 $19.99 $14.99 |
||
Tubing | Corsair Softline 10/13 mm 3 meter | $16.99 | ||
Coolant | Corsair XL5 Clear 1 litre bottle | $17.99 |
Adding up the cost of the full custom loop used on our AMD Ryzen 9 3950/ASRock RX 5700 XT Taichi system, including multiples of the above and a CPU block, the total comes to $822.86. This includes two packs of Corsair LL120 RGB 120 mm fans and all the fittings we needed. This isn't a solution for those on a budget, but the Corsair Hydro X series does offer high-quality components with great and ARGB influenced aesthetics which was never going to be cheap.
If we strip the non-essential components including extra system fans, and fittings such as the ball valve, angled fittings and used the bare minimum, it becomes more comparable to other brands offerings. A core Corsair Hydro X series 240 mm CPU loop would cost $528.92. In comparison, an EKWB RGB 240 mm water cooling kit costs $459.99 on Newegg which is a similar setup. The Corsair Hydro X series loop overall pricing could be cut down by opting for other brands fittings, tubing, and cooling fans, but the Corsair store can sometimes be a little overpriced when compared to direct retail channels such as Amazon and Newegg.
Corsair Hydro X Series Conclusion
In terms of aesthetics, compatibility with other Corsair RGB components with its iCUE software, and cooling performance, most things lean on the positive side of things for the Hydro X Series. The primary caveat is the price, and while custom liquid components have never been cheap, the Corsair Hydro X Series doesn't capitalise on that part of the market. Instead, it offers impressive looking parts for one of the best RGB ecosystems from any brand, and each part built to a high-quality standard. The Corsair iCUE software is very intuitive, and the Hydro X Series in conjunction with its Custom Cooling Configurator adds an extra element that some brands cannot compete with. It's not a cheap method to cool a processor and graphics card, but for users looking to build a full Corsair rig as much as possible now have a platform to do so.
72 Comments
View All Comments
Holliday75 - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Was going to post this. I was like uhhhhhhhhhhh I was not planning on buying a new CPU, but at that price buy buy buy!airdrifting - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Who is paying $130 for 3 Corsair fans? lolMakaveli - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
lol I have a Corsair H150i which is RGB but comes with just Regular ML fans.As soon as I saw the price for Corsair RGB fans I said forget that idea.
I payed like $200 CAD for the H150 I was not going to spend $130 on fans just for RGB.
Corsair what are you smoking.
Teledhil - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Is the World of Tanks enCore a useful benchmark? I get around 200 fps with my i7-2600k@4'3GHz and a RTX-2080. (1080p with max settings, no RTX)eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Why does the illuminated CPU cooling look like Mr. Potato Head?Tomatotech - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Because the CEO made a bet with his friends that he could release an overpriced potato head and intelligent discerning gamers will happily buy it as long as it was lit up with LEDs.Judging from the amount of clicks and comments on this article, I fear we may see more vajazzled articles on AnandTech.
Arbie - Wednesday, February 5, 2020 - link
Which is the larger factor in selling liquid cooling:• Actual need, to manage very hot chips at tolerable noise levels.
or
• Relentless hype and attention on tech websites.
??
Neither one will ever sell it to me. And - 30W for the pump alone?
Roboionator - Thursday, February 6, 2020 - link
In what world are such temperatures, i test some air coolers and custom water systems but this what a see here is from another world.....I don't see a forum that doesn't have a high tempreature thread....(3900x and 3950X)Roboionator - Thursday, February 6, 2020 - link
delta temp, all temps + 21/22 just confusingRatman6161 - Thursday, February 6, 2020 - link
Ok, I see. But we are still left with not that much cooling performance difference between the el-cheapo product and the expensive product and no indication on weather or not the slightly better cooling would equate to any performance benefits.