2700x OC with an Arctic Freezer 33 Esport?
2700x OC with an Arctic Freezer 33 Esport?
Hello, I'm checking if purchasing the 2700x would require a new cooler or if my Arctic Freezer 33 Esport (2 Fan variant) would be enough. The specs mention a TDP of 105W and suggest a maximum cooler load of 210W, but it can handle up to around 310W.
Wifiburger :
Imdawdaw :
Hi, I was wondering if buying the 2700x would require a new cooler or if my Arctic Freezer 33 Esport (2 Fan variant) would suffice. The specs say 105W TDP and a recommended max of 210W, but it can handle up to around 310W. It seems similar to the Hyper212, though it was noisy and hot. If you keep your 2700x at base clock 3.7GHz, that 105W TDP is correct; otherwise boosts are around 140W or 180W.
I own a 1800x @4GHz and found the 2700x closely matches the 8700K, so it might be worth checking for a good deal. The cooler keeps my 1800x below 70°C on BF1 most of the time, reaching a peak of about 72°C.
Hi, I was wondering if purchasing the 2700x would require a new cooler or if my Arctic Freezer 33 Esport (2 Fan variant) would be enough. The specs mention a TDP of 105W and suggest a maximum cooler capacity of 210W, though it can handle up to around 310W. It seems similar to the Hyper212, which worked on mine but was noisy and hot. If you keep your 2700x at base clock 3.7GHz, the 105W TDP is correct; otherwise, boosts would be around 140W or 180W.
Wifiburger :
Imdawdaw :
I wanted to check if buying the 2700x would require a new cooler or if my Arctic Freezer 33 Esport (2 Fan variant) would suffice. The specs say 105W TDP and a cooler recommendation up to 210W, but it can handle around 310W. It seems similar to the hyper212, though it was noisy and hot. If you keep your 2700x at base clock 3.7ghz, the 105W is correct; otherwise boosts are 140w or 180w. I own a 1800x @4GHz, which stays below 70°C on BF1 most of the time and peaks near 72°C at 1.35v with 97% usage. So the 2700x would likely be hotter and harder to cool, but would that really mean an upgrade is necessary when overclocking? Would it reach 80s temperatures or stay in the low/mid 70s?
I was wondering if purchasing the 2700x would require a new cooler, or if my Arctic Freezer 33 Esport (2 Fan variant) would suffice? The specs mention a TDP of 105W and suggest a maximum cooler capacity of 210W, though it can handle up to around 310W. It seems quite similar to the Hyper212, which worked on my 2700x but was noisy and hot. If you intend to keep your 2700x at base clock 3.7GHz, then the 105W TDP is correct; otherwise, boosts would be around 140W or 180W.
I own a 1800x @4GHz, and I was curious because the 2700x closely matches the 8700K, making it a potentially good deal if I find a great price. The cooler keeps my 1800x below 70°C on base clock 1.35GHz during gaming, peaking around 72°C at 1.35V with 97% usage of my 1080. So I expect the 2700x to be hotter and more challenging to cool, but would it really need an upgrade when overclocked? Would it reach temperatures similar to the 80s or stay in the low to mid-70s?
I’ve been using the Hyper212 with push/pull and two 120mm fans for intake/exhaust, attached to a heatsink. CPU temperatures stayed around 42°C while gaming, and Prime95 reached over 65°C under PBO (which supports 160W–180W). Your setup should work fine, though fans might run slightly higher.
I switched to a budget AIO with Masterliquid 120, using push/pull at lower RPMs, which eliminated the extra fans. Now I’m around 40°C during gaming and 60°C Prime. According to Asrock utility, temperatures plus thermal control are accurate, so I don’t fully trust Ryzen Master or other third-party utilities.