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Thermaltake LA360-S ARGB Sync AIO Liquid Cooler Review

Thermaltake’s  Software

The Thermaltake LA360 S ARGB Sync AIO Liquid Cooler uses TT Segment Code software to unlock its full potential, especially when it comes to customizing the 2.4 inch LCD display on the water block. This software allows users to monitor real time system stats like CPU temperature, usage, and fan speed, and also lets them personalize the display with custom images or animations. It’s designed to be intuitive, giving users control over both performance data and visual aesthetics.

 

In addition to the LCD features, the cooler’s ARGB lighting can be synced with major motherboard platforms such as ASUS Aura Sync, MSI Mystic Light Sync, GIGABYTE RGB Fusion, and ASRock Polychrome, allowing for seamless integration into any RGB setup.

Example (ASRock Polychrome software):

You can download Thermaltake’s software here.

 

Test setup and Testing Methodology

The system used for testing is listed in the table below. Ambient temperatures were kept at 24 degrees Celsius +/- 1 degree. We used the included thermal paste, which I think is more than adequate. The fan speed was set to default. The idle temperatures were recorded after 10 minutes of idle and max temperatures were recorded after a 5 minute torture test using Adia 64 CPU System Stability Test and recording the Cores values and taking the average.

CPU Intel Core i9-13900K
Cooling Thermaltake LA360-S ARGB Sync AIO Liquid Cooler
Motherboard AsRock Z790 Taichi Lite Motherboard
Cooling Fans Thermaltake  CT 120 ARGB 120mm Fans x4, TOUGHFAN EX12 Pro High Static Pressure PC Cooling Fans x3
Ram Patriot Viper Gaming Venom RGB DDR5-7200 32GB Memory Kit
SSD PNY XLR8 CS3150 1TB SSD
PSU KISS QUIET Silent G3 750W Power Supply
VGA Radeon RX 7900 GRE
OS Windows 11

 

 

Idle Temps

For our tests, we used our Intel i9 13900k processor which has default TDP of 125W and is known to run fairly hot. With zero workload, the CPU idle temps was around 40 degrees Celsius.

 

 

Load Temps

At 100% CPU load, the CPU temperatures reached a high of 92 degrees Celsius and maximum of 100 degrees Celsius for the CPU package. The E-Cores reached a temperature of 87 degrees celsius and the P-Cores maxed out at 97 degrees Celsius.

These temperature reading sounds about rightr, but one thing that I noticed was this AIO cooler is a lot quieter than alot of other 360 AIOs we’ve tested.

 

For those who are new to DIY PC building, we highly recommend you use a 360 AIO cooler (for bigger) for all current generation of CPUs from AMD and Intel.

Now lets move on to the Conclusion and Verdict!

 

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