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Deepcool Gammaxx L360 V2 RGB AIO CPU Liquid Cooler $109 (Save $40) + Delivery ($0 with mVIP/ Sydney Pickup) @ Mwave

250

Top Quality AIO (Deepcool has their own factory hence the competitive pricing), can personally vouch for these units. Haven't used the fans though.

Its all 12v RGB.

Other Sales on Deepcool products:
https://www.mwave.com.au/searchresult?button=go&w=DPFEB2021

Z3 Thermal Paste 6.5g WAS $7.00 NOW $4.00
CL500 4F AP Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX Case WAS $149.00 NOW $119.00
PEC 300 PCI-E x16 Extender Ribbon Riser Cable WAS $39.00 NOW $32.00

DQ750-M-V2L 750W 80 PLUS Gold Fully Modular Power Supply – Black WAS $169.00 NOW $139.00
DQ750-M-V2L 750W 80 PLUS Gold Fully Modular Power Supply – White WAS $169.00 NOW $149.00
DQ850-M-V2L 850W 80 PLUS Gold Fully Modular Power Supply WAS $189.00 NOW $149.00

CF 120 120mm A-RGB LED Case Fan WAS $32.00 NOW $25.00
MF120 GT ARGB 120mm Case Fan - 3-in-1 Pack WAS $79.00 NOW $55.00
CF 140 140mm A-RGB LED Case Fan - 2 in 1WAS $69.00 NOW $59.00

Gammaxx GT A-RGB CPU Air Cooler WAS $69.00 NOW $59.00
Gammaxx GT V2 RGB CPU Air Cooler WAS $69.00 NOW $49.95
GAMMAXX GTE V2 – White CPU Air Cooler WAS $49.00 NOW $45.00

Castle 240EX RGB AIO CPU Liquid Cooler – White WAS $169.00 NOW $129.00
Gamer Storm Castle 240 V2 ARGB AIO CPU Liquid Cooler WAS $179.00 NOW $129.00
Gamer Storm Castle 360 RGB V2 AIO CPU Liquid Cooler WAS $199.00 NOW $159.00
GamerStorm Castle 360EX ARGB AIO CPU Liquid Cooler WAS $229.00 NOW $169.00

Related Stores

Mwave Australia
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closed Comments

  • +3

    i always confused this brand name to deadpool…

  • and mwave are back up, and moving well on the outside…

  • The air coolers are decent as well if you wanna go that route.

  • Agreed.

    The only thing people rarely discuss between air and water, is the thermal density of the two solutions.

    Often you can get slightly better results with air; but if you're actually needing an aftermarket cooler, there's every chance you're riding an overclock.

    And sometimes staying at, say, 90c solid, is better than waivering between 87c and 92c when you have a 95c thermal limit, like on ryzen.

    • +2

      What on earth are you talking about?

      • +7

        Glad you asked, The comment was negged, so a lot of people are new to extreme CPU cooling solutions.
        I competition overclocked for many years (won a couple too!)

        Basically, a stack of fins and heatpipes will have a certain thermal mass.

        Thermal mass as a hugely broad statement, generally goes up when something is more dense (assuming the material conducts heat in the first place). And one of the most cost effective, heat transferring, and dense materials is water.
        Significantly higher than heatpipes and fins.

        You can see this, by removing the fans from both coolers and watching how quickly an air cooler will spike, compared to an equally sized water cooler.

        While heatpipes can be more efficient and effective (since it's basically vapor cooling), the thermal density is much lower, which will often need more airflow to dissipate the heat faster, and ergo can result in spiking when there are changes in environment, fan speed, or even sudden loads on the heat source.

        Another example, is why I, and other people use large copper 'bricks' when LN2 cooling, because if you were to pour LN2 directly on the die, or a normal cooler you'd just put a cage around, the low thermal mass would result in a massive drop (negative spike) and you'd get a negative crash (too cold for electrons to be fast enough).

        You rely on the copper bricks thermal mass to equalize and slow the temperature changes.

        Anyway;
        The point I made above was that even though air coolers with modern heatpipes can dissipate heat faster than your everyday cheap AIO, often resulting in a slightly lower average temperature, the down side to this, is that if you're actually in NEED of a water cooler, you're likely straddling the line of safe CPU temps (unless you're throwing money away, there's always those people).

        The reason that's relevant, (for example using my own system) is that my overclock, 5.1ghz all cores on a 5820k, will often hit 101c under stress load (like H26x Encoding or 3D rendering). However, things like openeing my window and letting a strong breeze 'disrupt' my airflow won't result in a change, as my loop has significant thermal mass, it would take many seconds for the coolant to move up by a degree.

        In comparison, an air cooler, which sees even 2 or 3 seconds of 'no flow' because of a cross breeze (which can be caused by things as simple as a pedestal fan passing your test bench), can cause a 2 or 3 degree spike; REALLY risking tripping TjMax, and unless you're the type to enjoy hard power-offs, most people want to avoid their OC hitting TjMax even 'rarely'.

        Anyway; that's what on earth I'm talking about.
        A water cooler, thanks to increased thermal mass, can result in much more stable cooling, in situations where you needed that improved cooling in the first place.

        Otherwise, with a strong enough fan, 'vapor' cooling like in large heatpipe air coolers can actually move heat faster, but requires a reliable airflow pattern, thermal sensors can be slow, dust, pets lying near a warm outlet, or just a few seconds of bad external airflow can cause that to slow, and the temp to alter for a second.

        As I said, people rarely discuss it, but thermal density is a BIG advantage to liquid cooling.

        I think it comes up so rarely, because people install bigger coolers when they're not yet needed.
        I've been overclocking and hardmodding for near on 20 years now, TjMax exists for a reason, so long as you're not hitting it, I've never had a processor fail within a normal usable lifespan.
        I upgrade roughly every 5 years; even if I'm halving the life of a processor, they're rated for well over 10 years.

        Lots of people just think they're pushing their system, but in reality, they're nowhere near the limit they can use, for the lifespan they need.

    • Why was this negged?

  • +1

    Anyone use these with an 9th or 10th gen i9 or Ryzen 9 processors?

  • This is probably overkill for a Pentium, right?

    • Yes

    • Depends how old.

      Those P4 Extremes with Hyperthreading often reached 120c

  • Anyone seen any decent in depth reviews on the L360 V2? Struggling to find much info on it.

    There is more detail around for the Castle line, which I also considered, but struggling to see why this would be $50 worse (can't rotate/change the logo perhaps).

    • From what I can see comparing spec to spec the cooling should be the same as Castle (same size rad, same fan specs, same pump rate, etc).

      Primary difference is addressable RGB on the castle (and 5V ARGB rather than 12V RGB on the Gammaxx), the pump is taller with a rotatable logo which can be switched to a blank/custom one.

      • I personally have the L360 V2, not that I use the fans, but they seemed fairly basic. The RED LED only versions costing $9 at mwave.
        Unfortunately a sealed AIO (unlike an air cooler) is a consumable part and will go bad typically after 4-6 years. The L360 V2 for its price is of amazing quality no worse than the overpriced $300 AIO's from corsair, nzxt etc (fans excluded). I feel like the L360 V2 and some noctua or arctic fans is a better solution than most offerings on the market. I tape off the logo on my unit.

        • I now also personally have the L360 V2. Seems like a decent unit, build quality looks good and the pump is nice and quiet.

          My temps are ok (max 70 degrees pushing a Ryzen 3600). But I believe that is down to the included fans more than anything, a fair amount of air is getting through the radiator, but far too much isn't. It is escaping out the side of the fan closest to the radiator (there is a cutout there from which light and air escape) as well as coming back down between the fan blade and the surrounding case. Given these are said to be high static pressure fans I was hoping they would do more on that front.

          Disappointing but it looks like I might need to go with better fans from someone else.

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