Zalman Introduces Reserator 3 Max All-In-One Liquid Cooler

Today’s market for CPU cooling is submerged by a wave of all-in-one liquid coolers. Well-known manufacturer of computer cooling systems Zalman is going against the tide by introducing a cooler that sets itself apart in a sea of AIO coolers that look pretty much all the same.

Zalman Reserator 3 Max - Image Courtesy Zalman
Zalman Reserator 3 Max – Image Courtesy Zalman

The new product presented by Zalman is somewhat different from offerings on the market today. While it does feature a copper base block with integrated pump, the new cooler is unlike any others when it comes to the radiator. Here, Zalman designed a rounded radiator with dual separate fin arrays. The hot coolant enters in the inner circular radiator where it passes twice before moving to the outer radiator for another two passes. The radiator and its dual fin arrays is pure copper, claims Zalman. Both radiator and block are nickel-plated, boasting a nice dark tint.

The radiator is cooled by a single 120mm PWM-controlled blue LED fan that spins between 1000 and 2200 rpm, for a noise level of 18.9~36.7 dBA. The open concept of the radiator allows for a certain amount of air to recirculate and reach the VRM and motherboard which makes for a cooler system overall, according to Zalman. It also allows for the mounting of a second 120mm fan in pull configuration, in addition to the stock fan. Zalman goes one step further in optimizing their cooler for maximum performance by filling it with a “nanofluid” instead of the standard mix of water used by competitors.

The entire unit weights in at 870 grams and comes with mounting hardware for all current sockets, both AMD and Intel. The price for the North American market is expected to be around $100, which will make it one of the most expensive single 120mm AIO liquid solutions out there.

While the design is quite innovative, it remains to be seen if the Reserator Max 3 can live up to Zalman’s claims it can dissipate up to 400W of heat.

Source: PC Perspective

dostov

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Avatar of dr_emad
dr_emad

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74 messages 0 likes

cooool.. that's like a stock water heatsink:)
wounder how it performs?

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Avatar of Soulcatcher668
Soulcatcher668

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2,071 messages 19 likes

There actually seems to be some science behind nanofluids. LINK

I would like to see a review of this one. They may be on to something here.

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Avatar of dudleycpa
dudleycpa

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Was thinking Reserator 2. Crazy concept?

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Woomack

Benching Team Leader

13,211 messages 2,240 likes

Looks about the same as any other AIO WC ... I think I can actually ask Zalman PR for review sample if it will be available in Polish office ...

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Avatar of dudleycpa
dudleycpa

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Looks about the same as any other AIO WC ... I think I can actually ask Zalman PR for review sample if it will be available in Polish office ...

Please do! You are the god of memory! The demi-god of AIO, would be great too!:thup:

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Avatar of RnRollie
RnRollie

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dear, dear, ... :-/
pardon me for being sceptic, but Zalman has dropped the ball quite a while ago already
and it remains to be seen if they can pick it back up with this Res3

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Avatar of dostov
dostov

Overclockers.com Reporter

601 messages 0 likes

Looks about the same as any other AIO WC ... I think I can actually ask Zalman PR for review sample if it will be available in Polish office ...

Woomack, I can't see how this look about the same as others. I agree the block and pump is nothing revolutionary, but the radiator could not possibly be more different in design when compared to all the other AIO out there today.

That being said, it remains to be seen what the performance will be like.

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Woomack

Benching Team Leader

13,211 messages 2,240 likes

I meant more like I don't expect anything special even though there is different radiator. We have to test it as it looks somehow interesting.

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Avatar of Soulcatcher668
Soulcatcher668

Member

2,071 messages 19 likes

The big difference would come from the fluid inside.

The heat transfer rates of nanofluids can be quite spectacular is seems.

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MattNo5ss

5up3r m0d3r4t0r

8,808 messages 0 likes

It looks like they took one of their CNPS9900 heatsinks, cut the ends off the heatpipes, and stuck the tubing on the ends for a make-shift radiator.

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