The Arctic Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 promises a large performance improvement over the plain non-pro version, and in today’s review I will check if this is the case, indeed.
The Liquid Freezer III Pro models have several changes compared to the non-Pro models, which are highlighted below:
- Intel Contact Frame: Arctic promises a 5–9-degree temperature drop on Intel platforms.
- New P12 Pro Fans: We have advanced our fan technology and have better fans with seven blades instead of five. According to Arctic, these fans perform at the level of the MAX fans without the added noise.
- Fixed Normalization: Arctic’s PWM technology has improved to show the correct RPM accurately.
The prices of the new Pro coolers are competitive, as you will see below:
Models | Normal Price |
Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 (Black) | $124.99 |
Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 A-RGB (Black) | $144.99 |
Liquid Freezer III Pro 360 A-RGB (White) | $149.99 |
Arctic will create concerns to the competition with the current price list, given that the respective coolers achieve good performance.
Cybenetics Coolers Database
Technical Specifications:
- Model Name: Arctic Liquid Freezer III Pro 360
- Socket Support: Intel LGA 1851 / 1700
- Socket Support: AMD AM5 / AM4
- Radiator Dimension [H×W×D]: 398 x 120 x 38 mm
- Tubing Length: 450mm
- Tube Diameter: Outer: 12.4 mm | Inner: 6.0 mm
- Block Material: Copper, Micro Skived Fins
- Radiator Material: Aluminum
- Number of Fans: 3x
- Fan Model: P12 Pro
- Fan Dimensions: 120×120×25 mm
- Bearing Type: Fluid Dynamic Bearing
- Fan ARGB: No
- Fan Daisy Chain: Yes
- Fan Speed Max: 3000 R.P.M.
- Fan Airflow Max: 77 cfm | 131 m³/h3/h
- Fan Air Pressure Max: 2.51 mmH2O
- Fan MTTF: 60,000 hrs
- Fan Connector: 4-pin PWM
- Pump Speed: 800 – 2800 RPM
- Pump connector: 4-pin PWM
- Total weight (kg): 2.02
- Street Price (excl. VAT): $125
- Warranty: 6 years
Pages:
We are waiting for the review of the P12 Pro and if possible a comparison between the Pro version and the Max version, to know which of the two is better to buy.
Well, if you need it urgently, you can make your own qualified decision about it (from Aris’ measurements) 😉
Max: https://www.cybenetics.com/evaluations/fans/84/
Pro: https://www.cybenetics.com/evaluations/fans/175/
Could you please review the Arctic P12 Pro in advance? I know the fan isn’t on sale yet, but I’d like to know if the PRO is worth it over the MAX.
Excellent review. I had already seen the “preview” on Cybenetics. In fact, it’s impressive how the P12 Pro performed in terms of static pressure!
As for the pump, which has a pump with better acoustic characteristics, Light Loop or the one in the review?
If you could give your opinion, for the quietest possible system based on AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D, which cooler would you use?
I’ll review the fan once I find the time (this period is crazy). Regarding the pump, I don’t remember the light loop pump noise. Please check the corresponding review.
I would get a monster and silent air-cooler to be frank, even for the 9950X3D. Most AIOs are noisy unless you fix their fans speed profiles (and lose performance)
–“…I would get a monster and silent air-cooler..”
By monster, do your mean the 1860g PCCooler RZ820? 😀
https://www.pccooler.com/details/176/
interesting 🙂
Ha, this is probably the biggest monstrosity
(but cannot be purchased at retail, as the manufacturer offers it only in their PC builds).
https://pc.sk/en/silentmaxx-titan-passively-145w?page=all