Cooler Master Nepton 280L AIO CPU Cooler Review

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Power Consumption

This is a new section that Im adding into the cooler reviews just to get a little more insight on what youre getting yourself into for power consumption. It’s only fair to check out how much each cooler consumes compared to stock, so well take a look at both idle and load numbers.

Each cooler will not have any power elements disconnected, unless otherwise noted; rather theyre introduced to help you understand the power consumption differences between the coolers when theyre fully functional.

To do our measuring for power consumption, well be using a Kill-A-Watt meter hooked up to the computer only, well let the system sit idle for 15 minutes after boot to allow it to settle down and take a measurement then. The average whole number that the meter is displaying is the number that we’ll use. Well then load up Prime95 to put a full load on the CPU to get each cooler to work as hard as they can, grabbing the power consumption numbers in the same way. All tests are done at the stock frequency of 3.9GHz turbo on the i7-4770k.

Cooler Master Nepton 280L - Power Usage

Overall Results: Cooler Master’s Nepton 280L utilized roughly the same power as the other liquid coolers, plus the stock HSF, however when the fans and pump got ramped up, the power usage was a decent amount more than the others. We saw an increase of roughly 30 watts on the Nepton 280L vs. the others that we’ve been able to test.