Toni Wan Knobi—February 14, 2026✓ Verified purchase
2nd one I've purchased, and for this price, if you have the room for it in your case, I don't know why you would buy an air cooler. It's quiet, easy to install, great looking ARGB, everything needed comes in the box (even a small tube of thermal paste which is enough for 1 application, although I used paste I already had). Purchased my first one in July 2024 to cool a Ryzen 7 5800X3D, and it kept that cpu around 70°c under my most intensive usage scenario, even in the hottest room in my house during summer( 80°f + ambient temp) using Corsair TM70 paste. Several months ago, I upgraded to a Ryzen 7 7800X3D, and the cooler is performing great on this cpu with temps in the 75° range under full load on extended Cinebench R23 stress tests, and closer to 60° on even the most CPU intesive games I have in my steam library. 19 months with no issues, and great temps! Recently purchased another for my step son's new PC after trying to use the stock AMD cooler on a Ryzen 5 5600X and watching temps hit 90° in cinebench. We decided to spring for the Aqua Elite 240, and since then, temps are staying in the 60° - 65° range during stress tests, and in the 50's during gaming using Arctic MX-4 paste (which I think I may use to re-paste my 7800X3D in the future, since it performs better than the TM70). I recommend this to anyone looking for really good cooling at an affordable price. The only reason I'd get a different AIO would be to have something flashy like a mini lcd on the cpu block that shows the temperature or cpu usage or whatever, which is totally unnecessary, but I can't resist shiny objects lol. It's quiet enough that I don't feel the 360mm version is necessary unless you are trying to make a super stealthy build while doing CPU intesive rendering or the like. Read more
Adam—January 15, 2026✓ Verified purchase
This works great in a Lian Li A4 case to cool an Intel i7-14700K and mounted without issue. I tested the cooling capacity with Handbrake and encoding some old home videos, and I could cool about 247 watts and keep the CPU at 90* C. Moving up to the 250-255w range would bring the temp up to 95* C and cause the frames processed to drop. I do have a Thermal Right cooling frame installed on the CPU, but overall, I'm pleased with this AIO - and very impressed for its price point. I have another Thermal Right AIO in a PC with a 9800x3d, and it keeps the CPU cool with a +200 Mhz overclock. The RGB colors are nice & bright, and they are easily controlled with Open RGB. I've been using the other TR AIO for about a year and a half at this point, and I have no lifespan concerns. Overall, I highly recommend this AIO for anyone seeking great performance in a small case. Read more
Joshua—June 22, 2025✓ Verified purchase
this was my first aio from this company i thought it was going to be bad because of the price point of the thing but it turns out its really good this thing cooled my am4 rig before i switched to am5 it was super easy to install the one downside i will say is the sheer amount of cables but they can be daisy chained together to make it not so bad the instructions were nice for installing the custom bracket that it uses when i upgrade coolers for my am5 i plan on going with this company again because their prices are unbeatable and the performance is actually really good this actually shocked me as i was thinking it would be a scam at 50 dollars i thought no way when every other aio costs double that it cools my am4 really well and the rgb is really good glad i decided to try and see because found a gem of a company doing so Read more
Dustin Garner—July 16, 2025✓ Verified purchase
I picked up the Thermalright Aqua Elite 240 V3 (ASIN B0CCNS5NZ9) after seeing it priced under fifty bucks. On paper, it ticks most of the boxes for a mid‑tower gaming build: 240 mm radiator, twin 120 mm PWM fans, and addressable RGB. After three weeks of use on a Ryzen 7 5800X, here’s how it really stacks up. What impressed me Solid value: routinely sells around $45–$50, which is crazy cheap for a 240 mm AIO. Amazon Respectable cooling: keeps my 5800X in the low‑70 °C range under Cinebench with fans set to 1,500 RPM and pump at stock 3,300 RPM. Fans aren’t screamers: spec’d at 25.6 dBA max and subjectively quieter than the case fans that shipped with my tower. Thermalright Full socket kit: AM4/AM5 and Intel LGA 1700/1200/115x brackets are in the box, so no aftermarket hardware hunt. Amazon Decent build quality: radiator fins arrived straight, pump top has a nice satin finish, and the sleeved 400 mm tubes reach the top of an ATX case without strain. Newegg.com Where it cuts corners Tubes are a bit stiff; routing in cramped cases is doable but not elegant. ARGB daisy‑chain is old‑school: a single 3‑pin 5 V lead for each fan and pump means extra cables if your board is light on headers. Newegg.com Pump whine above 60 % duty: at ~3,000 RPM it’s fine, but full tilt introduces a faint buzz you’ll hear if the case sits on your desk. Thermal paste packet is “just enough.” Grab a better tube if you plan on remounting later. Manual is pictogram‑style and tiny—YouTube installers are your friend here. Bottom line If you want liquid cooling temps on an air‑cooler budget, the Aqua Elite 240 V3 delivers. It won’t dethrone premium AIOs in acoustics or polish, but for everyday gaming and moderate overclocks, it’s hard to beat the price‑to‑performance ratio—provided you can live with a few rough edges. Read more
Daxsen Powell—February 26, 2026✓ Verified purchase
Works great, easy installation, cheap, looks nice. Great value Read more