Antec Kühler Vs. Corsair Hydro: Sealed Liquid CPU Coolers Compared
Table of contents
- 1. Sealed Liquid Coolers Do Battle
- 2. Antec Kühler H₂O 620
- 3. Antec Kühler H₂O 920
- 4. Corsair Hydro H80
Offering a taste of liquid-cooled performance without the maintenance hassle, sealed-liquid systems are the logical choice for many high-end builds. We compare four options to an air-cooled standard to see if any of them stand out above the others.
The path to better PC component cooling has always involved bigger cooling surfaces, more airflow, or lower ambient temperatures. The problem with standard heat sink and fan designs is that the fans already hit the space limits of most systems, and making the cooler thicker can push its weight beyond the limits of the ATX form factor, causing bowing, bending, and sometimes even breaking. Noisy high-speed fans are required to maintain reasonable air velocity through the thicker sink, and pushing for the lowest ambient temperature often necessitates an acoustically-unfriendly chassis.
Liquid cooling conquers these challenges by relocating the heat sink to a more appropriate location, where it can be supported by the case and exposed to a cooler and/or higher-velocity airstream.
Moving the radiator away from the processor interface also benefits the builder, providing ample space to reach memory modules and on-board power connectors. And yet, maintenance issues often chase builders away from the custom cooling systems so often favoured by our most enthusiastic readers. The alternative for low maintenance, sealed systems have become so reliable that they’re even being branded and sold by AMD (with its FX-series processors) and Intel (complementing the Sandy Bridge-E-based chips).

For as similar as the two coolers in the shot above seem, though, the included installation hardware is platform-specific. We decided that if we're going to spend big money on cooling, we want more universality than that. So, we chose to compare retail coolers able to support multiple platforms (two of which were produced by the same company as the platform-specific models).

| Closed-Loop Cooler Features | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antec Kühler H₂O 620 | Antec Kühler H₂O 920 | Corsair Hydro H80 | Corsair Hydro H100 | |
| Length | 5.6" | 5.6" | 6.0" | 10.8" |
| Width | 4.7" | 4.7" | 4.7" | 4.8" |
| Rad. Thickness | 1.1" | 1.9" | 1.5" | 1.1" |
| Cooling Fans | 1 x 120 x 25 mm | 2 x 120 x 25 mm | 1 x 120 x 25 mm | 2 x 120 x 25 mm |
| Total Thickness | 2.1" | 3.9" | 2.5" | 2.1" |
| Control Type | Integrated/Auto | Programmable | Integrated/Auto | Integrated/Auto |
| Weight | 24 Ounces | 39 Ounces | 42 Ounces | 41 Ounces |
| AMD Sockets | All AM2 to AM3+ | All AM2 to AM3+ | All AM2 to AM3+ | All AM2 to AM3+ |
| Intel Sockets | 775, 1156/1155, 1366 | 775, 1156/1155, 1366 | 775, 1156/1155, 1366, 2011 | 775, 1156/1155, 1366, 2011 |
| Web Price | £40 | £75 | ~£70 | ~£80 |
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I presume the Antex 920 (auto) was benchmarked with the silent setting selected. As the device is programmable it would make sence to benchmark it using the custom setting where the noise at load is equal to the 620 (as they share the same fans).
It's a bit misleading to use the silent setting as obviously allows much higher tempratures in the attempt to keep noise down. I looks like the auto settings for the corsair models are quite aggressive in their cooling.
I have a Corsair H80 and put some Scythe Ultra Kaze 3000 RPM fans on it. The performance with these fans is incredible. The H80 is awesome.
I recently picked up the Antec 620, it may not cool as well as the H80 but it's significantly cheaper and still does what it needs to.
For anyone who reads this review - although it is true that the Corsair "H" series products have great cooling capability - be warned that they have problems. The pump has a habit of making a horrible grinding noise (which seems to be the most common problem) and some users have experienced defective fan controllers as well. A quick search of the Corsair forums (see http://forum.corsair.com/forums/fo [...] php?f=155) will illustrate what I mean. I've personally had two dud H80s and will never be going back there. Oh, and Corsair expect their customers to pay for shipping to return a faulty product when they issue an RMA!