95W TDP requires AIO liquid cooling — the stock air cooler will thermal throttle under sustained load.
Dell OEM AIO or Corsair H60/H75 recommended. Only 120mm radiators fit the chassis.
95W TDP — AIO liquid cooling is required; do not run this CPU on the stock air cooler under gaming load.
Factory option on higher-tier R9 SKUs. Confirmed working. Overclockable via AWCC.
Factory option on flagship R9 SKUs, and community confirmed working as an upgrade from lower-tier CPUs.
AIO liquid cooling is required — stock air cooler cannot handle 95W under load. Dell OEM AIO or Corsair H60/H75 are the recommended fits.
127W TDP — the absolute platform ceiling, but thermally demanding for the R9 chassis.
AIO liquid cooling is mandatory. The cramped case means CPU temperatures will climb significantly under sustained all-core load even with an AIO.
Factory option on the highest-end R9 configurations; confirmed shipping in some SKUs. Upgrade from a non-KS config is possible but thermal headroom is tight.
Functionally identical to the i9-9900K but without integrated graphics — socket and TDP are the same.
Since the R9 requires a discrete GPU, the lack of iGPU is irrelevant. AIO cooling still required.
10th gen Comet Lake uses the LGA1200 socket — physically incompatible with the R9's LGA1151 socket. Will not seat in the board.
All AMD Ryzen processors use AM4 or AM5 sockets. The R9 is LGA1151 Intel-only — no adapter or compatibility path exists.
Confirmed running on the stock 460W PSU in 460W-config R9 systems — 160W TDP leaves adequate headroom alongside a 65W CPU.
Factory option; 850W PSU strongly recommended — combined system draw approaches the 460W limit under sustained GPU and CPU load.
850W PSU required — 215W GPU + CPU draw exceeds the 460W supply's safe operating range.
FE at 267mm is at the confirmed clearance limit; AIB cards may be longer. Verify dimensions before purchasing any non-reference version.
850W PSU required. FE at 267mm is right at the case clearance limit. Most AIB cards run 280mm+ and will not fit.
850W PSU required. The Alienware factory blower-style variant is specifically sized for the R9 chassis. Aftermarket AIB versions are almost universally longer than 267mm and will not fit.
850W PSU required — 300W TDP is one of the highest factory-shipped cards in any R9 config.
The reference design blower cooler exhausts heat out the rear, which is preferable in the R9's cramped case. Expect elevated system temperatures under sustained load.
850W PSU recommended. The R9 was among the first Alienware desktops to ship with AMD GPUs as factory options alongside the NVIDIA lineup.
850W PSU required. Reference-design blower preferred for the R9 chassis. AIB partner cards may exceed 267mm — verify length before ordering.
FE at 242mm fits comfortably within the ~267mm clearance. 850W PSU required.
No specific R9 community confirmation found — compatibility based on known card dimensions and PSU figures. Compact dual-fan AIBs (Asus Dual, MSI Ventus 2X) at ~242mm are the safest choices.
Asus Dual RTX 3070 OC (242mm long, 135mm wide) confirmed fitting and running in the Aurora R9 chassis — R9 community confirmed on Dell's own forums.
850W PSU required. The Asus Dual is a recommended choice specifically because its 135mm width fits under the PSU swing-arm bracket with clearance to spare.
MSI Ventus 2X RTX 4070 confirmed working in the Aurora R9 with no modifications required — reported by an R9 owner in the Dell Community forum thread.
850W PSU required. The Ventus 2X at ~243mm fits under the PSU swing-arm bracket without removing any case hardware. Compact dual-fan models only — triple-fan AIBs will exceed the width limit.
FE card at 285mm is over the standard ~267mm clearance, but community reports from the R8 (identical chassis) indicate that replacing the front intake fan with a slim 15mm fan allows a 285mm card to fit.
This requires hardware modification. 850W PSU required. Thermal performance with a 320W GPU in this case will push the system hard — expect high fan noise under load.
All AIB partner RTX 3080 cards are 300–335mm and will not fit even with the fan swap.
All Asus, EVGA, Gigabyte, MSI, and Zotac RTX 3080 partner cards run 300–335mm in length — well over the R9 case limit even with the front fan modified.
336mm length, 3-slot design, and 450W TDP make this incompatible on every dimension — length, width, slot count, and PSU capacity.
The Asus Dual-OC measures 242mm long and 135mm wide — both within the R9's clearance constraints. The plastic GPU retention hinge from the factory card is incompatible, but the card seats firmly with the standard bracket screws alone.
Multiple users in the same thread reported a 40%+ effective speed improvement over the RTX 2070 Super. 850W PSU confirmed adequate. Adding an intake fan in the HDD bay is recommended to manage rising CPU temperatures under combined GPU and CPU load.
An R9 owner confirmed the RTX 4070 Ventus 2X 12G OC installed and ran without removing the PSU triangle bracket or replacing any case fans.
The Ventus 2X is a compact dual-fan design at approximately 243mm long — sits comfortably within the 267mm clearance. 850W PSU required.
The i9-9900K uses the same LGA1151 socket and has been validated in R9 configurations. No BIOS update is required; the R9 BIOS recognises the 9900K natively.
Fan noise spiked immediately on install using the stock air cooler. The solution is an AIO liquid cooler — the Dell OEM AIO or Corsair H60/H75 are confirmed fitting the R9's 120mm radiator mount. The stock pancake air cooler cannot sustain 95W under gaming load.
An R9 owner reported that the RTX 4080 Super at 318mm will not fit the chassis and was forced to look at cards within the 10.5" (267mm) limit instead.
This confirms the case clearance figure used throughout this page. Any card marketed at 11"+ should be treated as incompatible without direct measurement confirmation from another R9 owner.
The R9's tight GPU clearance and proprietary PSU create real pitfalls — if you've successfully installed a card or swapped a CPU, your report is the most useful data on this page. Compact GPU reports especially, since AIB dimensions vary so much by model.