Arctic launches their Freezer 36 CPU cooler with insane early-bird pricing

Arctic celebrates their 23rd anniversary with the launch of their new Freezer 36 series of CPU coolers

Arctic has officially launched their new Freezer 36 series of CPU coolers. To celebrate the company’s 23rd anniversary, they have released these heatsinks with crazy early-bird pricing. This allows early customers to grab these new heatsinks at bargain basement prices.

When compared to its predecessor (the Freezer 35), Arctic claims that their new Freezer 36 cooler can run an i9-13900KF CPU almost seven degrees cooler. Not bad for a heatsink with such low pricing.

For Intel’s new LGA1700 CPUs and upcoming LGA 1851 CPUs, Arctic have given their users an CPU contact frame upgrade. This update replaces Intel’s traditional mounting system and allows CPU coolers to make more even contact with Intel processors. This increases cooling performance and reduces the mechanical stress on supported Intel CPUs.

For the upcoming LGA1851 and LGA1700 installation, the Freezer 36 uses a special contact frame that distributes the contact pressure evenly. This minimizes the mechanical stress on the CPU and motherboard and increases cooling performance.

In their marketing materials, Arctic claims to offer superior levels of cooling performance to heatsinks like Noctua’s NH-D12L, DeepCool’s AK400 DZ Plus, and be quiet’s Dark Rock Pro 4. Arctic’s 36 series coolers all whip with two pressure-optimised 120mm fans an with MX-6 thermal compound.

Arctic Freezer 36 Pricing

At launch, the Freezer 36 will be available with huge discounts. By huge, we mean huge, discounts of almost 50%. In the US, their standard Freezer 36 will cost $25.40 instead of $45.99. Below are the current UK prices of Arctic’s new Freezer series on Amazon UK. Post-launch pricing for these coolers will be higher.

You can join the discussion on Arctic’s new Freezer 36 CPU cooler on the OC3D Forums.

Mark Campbell

Mark Campbell

A Northern Irish father, husband, and techie that works to turn tea and coffee into articles when he isn’t painting his extensive minis collection or using things to make other things.

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