Ryzen 9 STOCK Cooler vs AIO

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A stock cooled Ryzen 9 seems like one of the worst things you could do when building a new PC, I mean, Intel stopped shipping CPU coolers with their higher end processors years ago, so the stock cooler must be worthless, right? 

Well, AMD thinks otherwise. Every Ryzen CPU currently on sale comes with one of four CPU coolers in the box, all from their Wraith lineup. The one that comes with the 3900X is the Wraith Prism RGB, and it is surprisingly beefy. 

With multiple heatpipes, a chunk of copper and aluminium fins, and a pretty sizeable fan – with a good helping of RGB – it’s actually not bad. Temps with it installed in what I must add is still a really painful way to mount a CPU cooler, actually weren’t the worst, with a Blender BMW render bringing the CPU up to around 84°c with a peak of 86°c, and a pretty audible amount of noise coming from the fan. It’s not terrible, but not the best.

So how does that compare to a cooler you are more likely to find strapped to this type of CPU – say a 240mm AIO liquid cooler, like the Fractal Design S24 that I love so much? Well, impressively well. The AIO was able to keep the CPU at around 71°c constant, with a 74°c peak, and a good bit quieter, but considering the Wraith is literally free in the box, it really isn’t too bad.

What I like the most here is that no matter what Ryzen CPU you pick, you still get a cooler that you can use and take no performance hit for it. Sure, you likely won’t be able to overclock much, and maybe precision boost won’t go that extra 50mhz, but it still works, it still lets you save a bit of money and get that better graphics card or faster RAM instead of an aftermarket cooler, and while I wouldn’t reallllyyy recommend you use the stock cooler with the 3900X, you can. And that’s great. 

A stock cooled Ryzen 9 is a horrible idea, right? Well, maybe not…

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