Granzon
Granzon GAI0.1 / GAM0.1 CPU Water Block, 0.15mm Jet Micro-Channel Copper Cold Plate, 5V A-RGB, Intel LGA115x/1200/1700/2011/2066 and AMD AM3/AM4/AM5
Granzon GAI0.1 / GAM0.1 CPU Water Block, 0.15mm Jet Micro-Channel Copper Cold Plate, 5V A-RGB, Intel LGA115x/1200/1700/2011/2066 and AMD AM3/AM4/AM5
TL;DR: GAI0.1 (Intel) and GAM0.1 (AMD) share a copper cold plate machined with 0.15mm jet-impingement micro-channels and a dense fin array under the jet plate, designed to drive coolant straight onto the hottest area above the die. The acrylic top integrates 5V 3-pin addressable RGB so the lighting can...
Common Applications
GAI0.1 (Intel) and GAM0.1 (AMD) share a copper cold plate machined with 0.15mm jet-impingement micro-channels and a dense fin array under the jet plate, designed to drive coolant straight onto the hottest area above the die. The acrylic top integrates 5V 3-pin addressable RGB so the lighting can sync with motherboard A-RGB headers. Intel mounting covers LGA 1150/1151/1155/1156/1200/1700/2011/2066; AMD mounting covers AM3, AM4, and AM5 including Ryzen 3/5/7/9 and ThreadRipper. The 0.15mm channels are unusually narrow, so an inline filter and clean coolant are required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the 0.15mm jet micro-channel design?
A: A jet plate forces coolant through 0.15mm channels and onto a dense fin array directly above the die, increasing surface area and breaking up the boundary layer for higher heat transfer.
Q: Which sockets are supported on each version?
A: GAI0.1 supports Intel LGA 1150/1151/1155/1156/1200/1700/2011/2066. GAM0.1 supports AMD AM3, AM4, AM5, and ThreadRipper.
Q: What lighting standard does it use?
A: 5V 3-pin addressable RGB (RBW) on the PMMA top, compatible with motherboard A-RGB headers.
Q: Coolant warning?
A: The 0.15mm channels clog easily. Do not use coolants with glitter, dyes, or suspended particles, and install an inline filter on the loop. Flush the system thoroughly before first use.
Q: What thread are the ports?
A: Standard G1/4 inlet and outlet.







