No. They are both compatible. Any asetek powered aio is compatible.
There's only a handful of companies that make rads, and only a couple of pump manufacturers. Pretty much they are all the same. The only difference being the fans. For all intents and purposes there's no difference. An aio is an aio. Evga is just a brand. Scrub that brand off and you have an asetek pump on a rad. Paint any other brand on it.. Same thing.
The Evga work better at higher speeds, the Corsair at lower speeds on the fans..
I used both the h55 pump and the evga pump both at 100% speeds and their fans too, so why does the h55 still get so much better temps than the evga?
here are some excerpts reviews about the h55 using the 1080ti
"My 1080 TI now sits at idle of 19C in a 72F Ambient Temp room. when I game it never goes over 54C, seriously!!! I even added 125Mhz to the clock to bump it up to 2025Mhz, still it runs 54C, and my FPS stays much more consistent while gaming"
"Installed this on a PNY GTX 1080ti (Blower edition) paired with a Corsair H55 in a push/pull config. Running it under full load and it so far hasn't even gotten beyond 45c. "
"So I was overclocking my Zotac 1080 ti Amp Edtion and was watching the temps hitting 80+ C on the GPU...Since the installation I haven't seen the GPU get any hotter than 47 degrees no matter what I do!"
"it went from the hight 80s C down to 48 C, almost 40 C degree difference. wow i was super happy. i used a corsair h55 with the g12 and they pair up good. "
"
MSI 1080 Ti Aero here. Silent with no load but becomes a Husquarna leaf blower during gaming. Had to summon the Kraken. In the pictures you will observe heatsinks, GPU PWM adapter cable and Corsair H55.
Before: 29C idle, gaming delved into 80s (Anno 1800 in 4K), high 60s and mid-70s (GW2 in 4K) - all settings maxed.
After: 24C idle, gaming 50C and 40C max respectively for the above.
And this is on stock H55 fan (low RPM non-PWM). "