Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Fractal Design Lumen RLs will be replaced due to an issue that could increase CPU temperatures

Must Read
Fractal Design Lumen RLs will be replaced due to an issue that could increase CPU temperatures



Manufacturer of PC cases and components Fractal design inform From problem With them Lumen . Series Liquid Coolers. This issue affects all users of this AIO Liquid Cooling Chain after a period of use CPU temperature may rise. After several reports from users regarding this issue, the manufacturer has investigated this situation until Confirm that drives can have this erroradvance replacing For users of these liquid coolers free of charge.

Geeknetic Fractal Design Lumen RLs will be replaced due to an issue that could cause the CPU to overheat 1

As a security measure, Fractal Design stops selling all Lumen series liquid cooling units You can even replace it with a new version. The problem encountered is Sediment buildup on the heatsink fins of heat from the CPU which over time prevents coolant from passing through properly, thus raising the CPU temperature.

Geeknetic Fractal Design Lumen RLs will be replaced due to an issue that could increase CPU temperature 2

Although your Fractal Design Lumen liquid coolant does not have this problem, the quality and safety of its devices for the manufacturer is of paramount importance and you can also get a replacement for a new version. This new version will arrive in about 6 weeks, which will first replace units available to customers and will go on sale later, replacing existing units with this new version. The manufacturer has enabled website To order a replacement for the Lumen series AIO liquid cooler.

Geeknetic Fractal Design Lumen RLs will be replaced due to an issue that could cause the CPU to overheat 3

end of the article. Tell us something in the comments!

Article author: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a computer engineer and my major is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began when I was 14 when I destroyed my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard disk. I still give free rein to my passion for the tech articles I write on Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, both contemporary and retro, on the 20+ consoles I have, as well as the PC.

See also  Martinez #129: Arrechedera, Mike Arciniega and the Creative Process of Globalizing Local Ideas

Latest News

More Articles Like This