AMD Wraith
AMD Wraith is a family of downdraft type CPU coolers designed by AMD. The Wraith was introduced in 2016 as a top of the line cooler AMD offered which is an upgrade to their previous heatpipe cooler designs and the "near silent" thermal solutions and was included with select FX and A10 APU lineup. The lineup has been expanded to consist four new variants, varying in cooling capabilities and lighting features, and are bundled in many of AMD's Socket AM4 & Socket AM5-based products except some of high-end and high-powered Ryzen CPU line-up. The coolers were supplied by several manufacturers such as Cooler Master, Foxconn, and Delta Electronics.

Models

AMD has designed and released several Wraith versions:[1]
Wraith (Original)
The initial variant of Wraith Cooler. It features square body with copper heatsink and white LED illuminated AMD logo on the side. It is bundled with AMD FX 6350, 8350, 8370 & A10-7890K and is rated for 125W TDP. The cooler however is compatible and can be used with the newer Socket AM4 based motherboards due to its two-pronged bracket mounting mechanism.
Wraith Stealth
The most basic cooling solution which sports a circular body with an all-aluminium fins. It is bundled with Ryzen 3, Ryzen 5, and certain Ryzen 7 (5700G) lineup and has a rating of 65W TDP. However, the mountings were changed to feature screws instead of a bracket so the cooler is only compatible for Socket AM4 and later motherboards.
Wraith Spire
It shares a similar design with Wraith Stealth which also sports a circular body but with a more massive aluminum fins. A copper slug is usually attached at center of base of the cooler. The copper slug was removed on all Spire coolers bundled with Ryzen 3000 CPUs. Wraith Spires are offered in two variants, one with and one without a programmable RGB LED ring. It is usually bundled with Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7 line and has a rating of 95W TDP. The Wraith Spire with LED ring was discontinued with the Ryzen 3000 launch.
Wraith Max
The top of the line cooler AMD offered at the time. It is an enlarged version of the original Wraith which sports a square body, a copper base, four heat pipes and programmable RGB LED ring. The mounting mechanism is different from Wraith Stealth and Spire saw the return of two-pronged bracket approach so that the cooler is backward compatible on previous generation AMD CPU's dating back to Socket 754/Socket 939. It has a rating of 140W TDP. It can only be obtained as an aftermarket upgrade or bundled with OEM system integrators as part of pre-built PC's. The Wraith Max was discontinued with the release of its successor, the Wraith Prism.
Wraith Prism
It debuted with the launch of 2nd Generation AMD Ryzen (Zen+), the cooler is basically an updated Wraith Max which features same copper base, heat pipes and programmable RGB LED ring, but with the addition of programmable RGB lighting which illuminates the whole fan itself. It can be either obtained as an aftermarket upgrade or bundled with some Ryzen 7 and Ryzen 9 CPU's and has a rating of 140W TDP.
See also
References
- "AMD Coolers Tested: Wraith Prism vs. Wraith Spire vs. Wraith Stealth". TechSpot. 2018-05-26.