DeepCool LT720 WH 360mm AIO Cooler Review
Peter Donnell / 1 year ago
Performance
Installation was a breeze, with the radiator easily fitting into the top of my NZXT case, and the thick tubing is easily directed thanks to its pivot mounts on the pump, and those plastic hose clips keeping things neat and tidy.
The pump has a fixed green LED for the small DeepCool logo, which I rather like, but the rest of it is ARGB with this freaking awesome infinity mirror effect that shows these floating squares; very funky!
Temperatures
The DeepCool LT720 is clearly no slouch when it comes to cooling, keeping out toasty i9-12900K at a peak of just 73c, and a very low idle of just 25c.
Using our overclocked cores and optimised voltages, the temperature stayed at a very steady 74c, which as you can see, if pretty much the standard for a good cooler on our charts, and make no mistake, we’ve only been testing very high-end stuff on these charts, so matching that performance is very good indeed.
Acoustics
Acoustics are a little louder, at 51 dBa, the normal profile fan curve is a bit aggressive, and that there are three fans, it’s often louder than a cooler with two fans.
Again a little louder here, but I’ll let you in on a little secret, lock it to 30% on a stock CPU or 50% on an overclocked CPU, and it’s virtually silent and gives practically the same cooling performance.
CineBench R23
The Cinebench score started well, at 25496, not the fastest, but it’s competitive.
However, with an overclock we saw that increase to a more impressive 26403.
Improvement
Overall, overclocking only saw a 1c increase in temperatures, but a 907 points increase in Cinebench.