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System Name | RBMK-1000 |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5700G |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2 |
Cooling | DeepCool Gammax L240 V2 |
Memory | 2x 16GB DDR4-3200 |
Video Card(s) | Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX |
Storage | Samsung 990 1TB |
Display(s) | BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch |
Case | Corsair Carbide 100R |
Audio Device(s) | ASUS SupremeFX S1220A |
Power Supply | Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W |
Mouse | ASUS ROG Strix Impact |
Keyboard | Gamdias Hermes E2 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Arctic introduced some of its most important products at Computex 2025. The company is broadening its portfolio of server cooling products with the introduction of new all-in-one liquid CPU coolers for servers. It partnered with ASRock Rack to set up example servers that implement its new AIOs. Each cooler is specific to a CPU socket type, and designed keeping in mind the various hot-spots in today's chiplet-based processors. Slender 2U thru 4U-sized radiators and high-performance fans are used to dissipate heat from the CPU, as shown in the example build below. The company even has solutions for 8U GPU and AI compute servers, although we've not seen specifics on the GPU types it supports at the moment. With Moore's Law buckling, server cooling is a market hard to miss for a company like Arctic.
Next up is the Arctic Senza, a fanless mini PC barebone that's designed to be located under your PC desk. The mini PC features a centrally-located motherboard seating an AMD Ryzen 7 5700G "Cezanne" processor, flanked with two large heatsinks to which heat from the SoC is transferred by heat pipes. Arctic showed us a blow-out of how the cooling solution looks underneath. The 5700G may be an outdated processor, but you can see where Arctic is going with this concept, especially with the wealth of H-segment mobile processors and MoD (mobile on desktop) platforms to choose from.
Next up is the new Freezer 8 entry-level tower type CPU cooler Arctic recently launched in 2025. It features a simple aluminium fin-stack with two direct-touch heatpipes, and a 100 mm PWM fan. The base model comes with a fan that has regular rifle bearing, while the Freezer 8 CO has a fan with dual ball-bearings for 24x7 operation. The cooler is compatible with AM5 and LGA1851 sockets.
We also saw Arctic's flagship AIO CLC for gaming desktops, the Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 A-RGB. Arctic launched this cooler earlier this year. The cooler comes in 240 mm, 360 mm, 280 mm, and 420 mm variants. A striking feature is its integrated cable management that connect the fans to the pump-block with minimal clutter, as they're routed through the sleeving of the coolant tubes.
The Arctic P Pro PST fan is a high-performance fan meant for radiators. It comes with a webbed impeller for axial airflow, a design that favors high static-pressure along with airflow. The 120 mm P12 Pro PST offers up to 77 CFM of airflow at 6.9 mm H₂O static pressure, while the 140 mm P14 Pro PST can do up to 110 CFM of airflow at 5.2 mm H₂O static pressure.
The star attraction at Arctic's booth is the Xtender (VG), a premium ATX mid-tower case with a 2-sided glasshouse, and plenty of fan/radiator mounts that include two 120 mm rear exhausts, three 140 mm top exhausts, and three side-facing 140 mm exhausts.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Next up is the Arctic Senza, a fanless mini PC barebone that's designed to be located under your PC desk. The mini PC features a centrally-located motherboard seating an AMD Ryzen 7 5700G "Cezanne" processor, flanked with two large heatsinks to which heat from the SoC is transferred by heat pipes. Arctic showed us a blow-out of how the cooling solution looks underneath. The 5700G may be an outdated processor, but you can see where Arctic is going with this concept, especially with the wealth of H-segment mobile processors and MoD (mobile on desktop) platforms to choose from.






Next up is the new Freezer 8 entry-level tower type CPU cooler Arctic recently launched in 2025. It features a simple aluminium fin-stack with two direct-touch heatpipes, and a 100 mm PWM fan. The base model comes with a fan that has regular rifle bearing, while the Freezer 8 CO has a fan with dual ball-bearings for 24x7 operation. The cooler is compatible with AM5 and LGA1851 sockets.




We also saw Arctic's flagship AIO CLC for gaming desktops, the Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 A-RGB. Arctic launched this cooler earlier this year. The cooler comes in 240 mm, 360 mm, 280 mm, and 420 mm variants. A striking feature is its integrated cable management that connect the fans to the pump-block with minimal clutter, as they're routed through the sleeving of the coolant tubes.





The Arctic P Pro PST fan is a high-performance fan meant for radiators. It comes with a webbed impeller for axial airflow, a design that favors high static-pressure along with airflow. The 120 mm P12 Pro PST offers up to 77 CFM of airflow at 6.9 mm H₂O static pressure, while the 140 mm P14 Pro PST can do up to 110 CFM of airflow at 5.2 mm H₂O static pressure.




The star attraction at Arctic's booth is the Xtender (VG), a premium ATX mid-tower case with a 2-sided glasshouse, and plenty of fan/radiator mounts that include two 120 mm rear exhausts, three 140 mm top exhausts, and three side-facing 140 mm exhausts.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site