AMD could have a cool idea with bundled water-cooling for Ryzen Threadripper

Word from the processor grapevine claims that AMD could be planning a major added bonus with its flagship Threadripper CPUs, in terms of bundling these offerings with water-cooling.

According to Japanese tech site Hermitage Akihabara, AMD’s top-of-the-range models, the Threadripper 1950X and 1920X, will come bundled as standard with a water cooler (for more effective cooling than the traditional fan setup).

The Threadripper 1950X is AMD’s 16-core model which runs at 3.4/4.0GHz (base/boost clock) and is priced at $999 (around £770, AU$1,260). The 1920X is the 12-core CPU clocked at 3.5/4.0GHz (base/boost) which will lighten your wallet to the tune of $799 (around £615, AU$1,010).

Obviously these are very beefy processors, and for those who want to try and really push those multiple cores, a water-cooling solution will certainly help in the quest for the highest clock speeds.

Cost of cooling

Assuming this speculation is on the money, the question is whether the pricing of these processors that AMD announced last week includes this bundled liquid cooling solution – or whether that will cost extra (and if the latter, presumably you’ll get a choice of liquid or air cooling).

As Techspot, which spotted this development, points out, a few years back AMD bundled water-cooling with its FX-9590 CPU, and in this case that added a $65 (around £50, AU$80) premium to the price tag. Although that represented a saving of nearly half on buying the cooler in standalone form.

To be honest, even if water-cooling does add a bit of extra cost, when you look at Intel’s comparable Core i9 processors, these top-end Threadrippers are still going to represent superb value-for-money.

For example, Intel’s i9-7960X processor (its 16-core model) costs $1,699 (around £1,315, AU$2,150), compared to AMD’s asking price of $999 (around £770, AU$1,260) for the 1950X.

As ever, we’ll just have to see how things pan out and if there is indeed any weight to this chatter – again, remember at this point, it is just a rumor.

The Japanese tech site said that Threadripper CPUs will be available on August 10, which pretty much matches up with what AMD previously said, hinting that the chips will be available early next month.

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).