Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (2024)

Tom's Hardware Verdict

Zalman’s massive, dual-tower CNPS20X is aggressively styled, and it stands poised to manage even the hottest, overclocked desktop processors.

Pros

  • +

    Solid thermal performance

  • +

    Attractive, modern design

  • +

    Quiet operation

Cons

  • -

    Fans generate a faint, 'buzzy' sound

  • -

    Mounting components could be integrated, simplifying installation

  • -

    Warranty period is only 1 year

  • -

    Expensive

Why you can trust Tom's Hardware Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about how we test.

Features and Specifications

  • Page 1: Features and Specifications
  • Page 2: Comparison Coolers, Testing Results and Conclusion

The Zalman CNPS20X is currently priced higher than other premium, big air cooling solutions at $100, although by comparison, it does offer excellent thermal performance with polarizing aesthetics. The massive, dual-140mm fan cooler features 3-pin, 5v aRGB lighting accents and challenges other top-tier air cooling towers in both sheer size and cooling performance. The CNPS20X is a solid alternative for those with a few more dollars in their pockets seeking a large air cooler with aggressive aesthetics.

Zalman CNPS20X Specifications

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Height6.5" / 165.1mm
Width5.63" / 143mm
Depth5.75" / 146.1mm, (6.88" / 174.8mm w/fans)
Base Height1.63" / 41.4mm
Assy. Offset0.0" (centered), (1.13" / 26mm w/fan)
Cooling Fans(2) 140 x 26mm
Connectors(2) 4-pin PWM, (2) 3-pin a#057db812, AM4
Warranty1 year
Web Price$100

Features of the Zalman CNPS20X

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (1)

Zalman ships its flagship heatpipe cooler with the common assortment of nickel-plated mounting studs, bolts, a universal backplate and crossbar hardware to cover the majority of common AMD and Intel CPU sockets. Thermal compound and a pair (each) of PWM and aRGB extension splitters round out the included accessories for the CNPS20X. Missing is a standalone aRGB controller, so you’ll need to use your motherboard’s 3-pin (5v) aRGB header or another compatible lighting solution.

Zalman covers the CNPS20X with a 1 year warranty, although details were difficult to find from included documentation and on the product website.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (2)

Zalman advertises the unique heatsink fin pattern and design as a “4D Stereoscopic Corrugated Fin” layout, which appears to consist of alternating protrusions and slightly opened and angular air channels, rather than parallel fin stacks. Aluminum cooling fins are stacked above and below copper fins, creating an appealing contrast between metals on the pair of cooling towers.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (3)

Six heatpipes rise up through the cooling fin stacks, one side parallel to the other, collecting at the base of the cooler. The fin layout and angular structure provides larger channels for airflow to move through the cooling tower.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (4)

The base of the CNPS20X features a milled baseplate, which acts as the absorption surface for the CPU IHS. The mounting collar wraps across the top of the heatpipes and is secured to the baseplate with a set of machine screws, creating an integrated base unit for thermal conductivity and installation of the cooler.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (5)

The pair of 140mm aRGB fans are shipped with the primary support frame not mounted to the fan’s cross frames. Once the support frames are secured to the fans with screws, the pivoting metal clips which secure the fans to the cooling fins can be attached on their hinges. While these steps are very simple, they seem unnecessary and make us question why Zalman doesn’t just ship the fans fully assembled.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (6)

Using a steel straightedge, we see the milling of the CPU baseplate contact surface is uniform across the entire face.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (7)

A view of the contact patch shows consistent distribution of thermal compound, with the thinnest and most uniform coverage in the center of the CPU, which represents the typical location for the CPU cores.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (8)

Having the tension screws built into the mounting plate would have been the ideal approach, making installation of the CNPS20X much easier, but that’s not the case here. Mounting and securing large air coolers shouldn’t be a balancing act and alignment exercise requiring more than one set of hands.

In order to tighten the tension screws, the CNPS20X must be correctly centered on the CPU and aligned with each threaded hole in the cross brace mounts below. Then you need to carefully lower the screws into place while applying enough pressure to start the threads while also not allowing the base to move, which could cause cross threading of the machine screws.

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (9)

Once the tension screws are secured, the 140mm fans can be clipped into place and the aRGB (3-pin, 5v) connector can be plugged into your compatible motherboard header or aRGB controller. Since the fans can be clipped into place at any interval up the height of the cooling fins, adjustment for memory DIMMs is possible for those with taller heat spreaders on their RAM.

  • 1
  • 2

Current page:Features and Specifications

Next Page Comparison Coolers, Testing Results and Conclusion

Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (10)

Garrett Carver

CPU Cooling Reviewer

Garrett Carver is a contributor for Tom’s Hardware, primarily covering thermal compound comparisons and CPU cooling reviews; both air and liquid, including multiple variations of each.

Latest

White House seeks to restrict China’s access to GAA chip technology and the high bandwidth memory that's critical for AI acceleratorsYou can use a full-sized GPU with ASRock's new Mini PC — DeskMate X600 only for China, priced at roughly $193 USDNvidia Blackwell and GeForce RTX 50-Series GPUs: Rumors, specifications, release dates, pricing, and everything we know (updated)
See more latest►

2 CommentsComment from the forums

  • Phaaze88

    Priced up there with the NH-U12A, is louder, has a 1 year warranty, has worse compatibility... hard pass.

    Reply

  • neojack

    It's ALCU return !

    i remember early 2000 when ALCU's heatsinks from zalman had the best price/performance/weight ratio , mixing copper and alluminium

    Reply

Most Popular
LattePanda Mu Review: Faster than Raspberry Pi 5, But Much More Expensive
ASRock Z790I Lightning Wi-Fi Review: Lightning in a (Little) Bottle
TeamGroup T-Force Dark AirFlow I SSD Cooler Review: The strongest NVMe heatsink you can buy
Sovol SV08 Review: A Speedy Voron Tribute
Asus ROG Strix Z790-I Gaming Wi-Fi Motherboard Review: ROG Features in Mini-ITX
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i review: Deep keys and a lightweight chassis
ID-Cooling FX360 Pro Review: Very Good for $60
Crucial Pro Overclocking DDR5-6000 C36 2x16GB Review: A Return to Overclocking
Gigabyte G6X gaming laptop review: Competent performance, but no standout features
Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ Review: Low-cost, high-speed
Dough Spectrum Black 27-inch OLED gaming monitor review: Pro-level accuracy and premium performance
Zalman CNPS20X Review: Pretty and Pricey (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Carmelo Roob

Last Updated:

Views: 5493

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (45 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Carmelo Roob

Birthday: 1995-01-09

Address: Apt. 915 481 Sipes Cliff, New Gonzalobury, CO 80176

Phone: +6773780339780

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Gaming, Jogging, Rugby, Video gaming, Handball, Ice skating, Web surfing

Introduction: My name is Carmelo Roob, I am a modern, handsome, delightful, comfortable, attractive, vast, good person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.