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June 1st, 2020 04:00

Aurora R8, cooling options

​I recently bought an Aurora R8 without liquid cooling not fully realising how the fans can get until after I bought it.​

​The configuration includes:​

​850w PSU​

​Intel i9 9900k​

​NVIDIA RTX 2080 Super​

​1Tb SSD, no HDD​

​32 Gb RAM​

​The noise occurs when the CPU is under load rather than the GPU.​

​I have read that the Corsair H75 and Noctua AF-A8 PWM are good after market options ofr improving cooling. I was wondering what experiences people have had when upgrading the cooling with this PC and how much it has affected noise levels. The other option would be transferring to a new case but I am not it a hurry to do this. Are the any pitfalls to watch out for when installing aftermarket cooling in this device?​

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5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 1st, 2020 06:00

@MysteryMedic 

I am surprised Dell allowed that system configuration without the AIO liquid cooling.

Corsair H75 will work. Rad is only 25mm thick. You can go to 27mm with push/pull.

I can't find a Noctua fan 'AF-A8 PWM'. The closest thing is 80mm, which you do not want. If you get the H75, which has 2 SP series fans, use one of those to replace the OEM lower front intake fan, and add a Corsair ML120 PRO (no LED, no RGB) the the radiator sandwich to avoid the BIOS start-up error. The ML120 PRO should be connected the the 4-pin side of the Y-splitter cable that powers the 2 fans from the TOP FAN header.

June 1st, 2020 06:00

Thanks for the reply!

The 80mm is the Noctua fan I meant. I won't buy that as you suggest. There seems to be a 2018 version of the Corsair H75 and a newer version. Would either work? Is the ML120 pro essential or will the computer work with the stock fan and H75 in Corsair's intended configuration just showing an error message that can be ignored?

I read if some other posts that there is an alternative configuration that doesn't use the Y splitter and avoids the error.

Is this the ML120 PRO you mean?: https://www.corsair.com/eu/en/Categories/Products/Fans/Magnetic-Levitation-Fans/ml-pro-config/p/CO-9050040-WW

In general the current configuration works fine, it just sounds like a vacuum cleaner when the CPU is under load.

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 1st, 2020 07:00

@MysteryMedic 

Yes, that is the correct ML120 PRO fan. You will want to use all 120mm fans.

The ML120 PRO is necessary to avoid the start-up error. Additionally, any 3-pin fan will not throw a start-up error, but will also not be modulated. 

I read if some other posts that there is an alternative configuration that doesn't use the Y splitter and avoids the error.

I am not sure what that configuration would be.

I only see the 2018 version of the H75 listed on the Corsair site, so I do not know what the specs are for any potential 'newer version'.

2.2K Posts

June 1st, 2020 08:00

@r72019 :

Dell does not sell the 9900k in the aurora r8 without liquid cooling.  If you got it that way stock it was a manufacturing defect and you should contact Dell to have them fix their error at their cost.

Maybe @MysteryMedic bought it from 3rd party seller like BB or Amazon? Or config could be different outside of the US? I'd say, if he did pay for liquid cooling, then yes, ask for the remedy. Else, let's all in case it turns out he got a K processor for free.

6 Professor

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5.3K Posts

June 1st, 2020 08:00

Also the corsair h75 2018 is the newest version.  It has a newer pump plus the aio block has white rgb leds.  

6 Professor

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5.3K Posts

June 1st, 2020 08:00

Dell does not sell the 9900k in the aurora r8 without liquid cooling.  If you got it that way stock it was a manufacturing defect and you should contact Dell to have them fix their error at their cost.

June 1st, 2020 09:00

Checking my system information it looks like the PC has the standard i9 9900 rather than the 9900K. When ordering it I thought I had selected the K version even though I didn't get it factory overclocked but this looks like my mistake. I am based in Europe and the Dell website for the product has now changed a lot (no more r8) so I can't go back and check if it was advertised as the 9900 or 9900K on the configuration I eventually selected. Either way I don't see myself doing anything to actually be bottlenecked by the CPU for the foreseeable future so I don't really have a reason to overclock.

Regarding the H75, corsair advertises two versions:

https://www.corsair.com/eu/en/Categories/Products/Liquid-Cooling/Single-Radiator-Liquid-Coolers/Hydro-Series%E2%84%A2-H75-Liquid-CPU-Cooler/p/CW-9060015-WW

https://www.corsair.com/eu/en/Categories/Products/Liquid-Cooling/Single-Radiator-Liquid-Coolers/Hydro-Series%E2%84%A2-H75-%282018%29-Liquid-CPU-Cooler/p/CW-9060035-WW

I would guess the 2018 is the current one as Beryllium suggests and the appropriate one for this PC?

An alternative configuration would be use the top stock fan with the radiator instead of the ML120 PRO suggested above although I would expect this to be more noisy/maybe not work.

 

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 1st, 2020 09:00

@MysteryMedic   Checking my system information it looks like the PC has the standard i9 9900 rather than the 9900K.

With a 65 watt CPU you could do just as well with the H60 single fan cooler. You would still need to get one ML120 PRO to avoid the start-up error, and use the SP series fan for lower front intake.

An alternative configuration would be use the top stock fan with the radiator instead of the ML120 PRO suggested above although I would expect this to be more noisy/maybe not work.

The OEM fan will work, and be LOUD.

June 1st, 2020 10:00

Thanks, that makes sense, probably would just mean my computer would start sounding like a vacuum cleaner a bit later if I kept the OEM fan then.

I found this video describing the installation procedure for the H60 in the R7:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RC9Nk0yT8bo

Would the only real difference in installing the H75 be that I would have 2 power cables to the Y adaptor (for 2 fans) + 1 for the radiation and otherwise installation would be much the same? Any tips/things to watch out for when actually putting the AIO in?

Once the AIO would you be able to recommend a guide for configuring software to work with the new fan or should it just be plug and play?

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 1st, 2020 11:00

@MysteryMedic   Would the only real difference in installing the H75 be that I would have 2 power cables to the Y adaptor (for 2 fans) + 1 for the radiation

For the H60 you would not need the Y-splitter. The radiator fan goes to TOP FAN header and the CPU water block goes to PUMP header . . . front fan to FRONT FAN header.

I will let the Aliens provide advice for AWCC settings.

19 Posts

August 8th, 2020 04:00

I know this thread is old, but what did you wind up doing? I also have an R8 without liquid. I don't wanna take the Mobo out do I'm thinking of just getting a better fan for CPU. Any advice?

6 Professor

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5.3K Posts

August 8th, 2020 07:00

H60:

2 inside.jpgpic 3.jpgcpu no paste.jpg

6 Professor

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5.3K Posts

August 8th, 2020 07:00

You don't need to remove the mobo to install the h60 or h75, new or old version.

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

August 8th, 2020 11:00

@slipjohn1    I'm thinking of just getting a better fan for CPU. Any advice?

There is no CPU fan that can compare to liquid cooling. As @r72019  indicated, the mobo does not need to come out for installation of the Corsair H60 AIO unit.

6 Professor

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5.3K Posts

August 8th, 2020 12:00

The R8 comes with its own bracket (regardless whether you got air cooling or liquid cooling).  It has the same thread as the Corsair H60's bracket.  That's why you don't need it. 

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