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Aircooling
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Aircooling
I was surprised that Corsair launched another complete liquid cooling model, the H60. The H50 being perfect for tiny spaces and moderate cooling demands. The H70 was able to cope with our overclocked Gulftown setup, crushing the H50's performance. It's beefier radiator and dual fan setup was a big step forward for higher cooling demands. Corsairs new H60 is the first new release of it's new partnership with the CoolIT company. Corsair continues to sell CoolIT's previous products to the end users. CoolIT themselves will only be shipping their products to system builders and integrators. CoolIT's products at the last years Cebit 2010 looked promising but had a few too many flaws to be really competitive with the Corsair/Asetek lineup of the H50 and H70. Time to open the box...
Aircooling
In the short time all-in-one water coolers have been on the market, it has been basically two styles to choose from. One with a large, round bulky head, and what I think is a weak mounting system, or the other variant which offers a much better mounting setup, similar results, but usually demands a higher price upon purchase. There wasn't, up until now, any way around this. You had to make that choice and live with your decision. Why can't we just get the best of both worlds?
Aircooling
Corsair has really put quite the name out for themselves. With really top notch power supplies, Corsair built quite a following as well. Not too long ago they opened their minds and started designing chassis such as the Obsidian 800D. This chassis , again, was top notch with no stone unturned, keeping the Corsair name intact. On top of what I have seen or bought myself over the years in memory sticks or power supplies, I have now gotten my dirty little grubbies on one of the most popular coolers on many forums.
Aircooling
Corsair gets their feet wet again, after close to 3 years they have introduced another water cooling product, the previous one being the Nautilus 500 back in 2006. This time around they’ve also opted for an all-in-one kit, but build inside the case, fitted onto the exhaust fan, a case with 120mm exhaust is a requirement, a large wallet is not! The Corsair H50 will be introduced at price of ~€/$70 which is pretty much on par with high end air cooled heatsinks out there! So can an all-in-one kit impress us? Let's find out!
Aircooling
Den Namen Corsair verbinden die meisten wohl mit hochwertigem Arbeitsspeicher, Netzteilen oder SSDs, doch brachte der Hersteller bereits im Jahr 2006 eine externe Wasserkühlung auf den Markt. Gute drei Jahre später folgt mit der Hydro Serie H50 nun auch eine kompakte Flüssigkeitskühlung, welche in erster Linie eine wartungsarme und leistungsfähige Alternative zu den aktuellen Luftkühlern darstellen soll. Einen ersten Eindruck und Ausblick auf Corsairs H50 könnt ihr euch im folgenden Artikel holen.
Aircooling
The double thick 120mm radiator makes the Corsair H80i is compact cooler that can fit into most cases, but it still offers enough cooler performance for enthusiasts running their processors at high frequencies and voltages.
Aircooling
We test Corsair’s latest all-in-one watercooling unit on 3 Intel platforms and one AMD system to find out how it stacks up to its predecessors as well as a Thermalright high end heatsink. How does it cope with different heat loads? We overclocked four systems to 4Ghz+ to find out.
Aircooling
The Corsair H100i is among the best close-looped water coolers on the market, but its integration with Link software, unique visual style and inclusion of two high performance SP120L fans makes it a step above most of the Asetek clones on the market. The price of the H110i is also right on with the performance and the build quality is top notch. Just make sure you don’t use the fans at their highest setting because they are too loud when above 2000RPM.
Aircooling
The Corsair H90 and H110 are high-end CPU coolers which are part of Corsair’s Hydro Series line. Both the H90 and H110 coolers use an updated Asetek design that uses 140mm fans. The Corsair H90 has a radiator that can fit a single 140mm fan on one side while the Corsair H110 has a 280mm radiator that can hold two 140mm fans per side. One more fan can be added to the Corsair H90 while two more fans can be added to the Corsair H110 in a push-pull configuration. Users can install both the H90 and H110 hydro series CPU coolers on Intel LGA115X, LGA1366 and LGA2011 sockets as well as AMD AM2, AM3, AM3+, FM1 and FM2 motherboards. The H90 and H110 all-in-one CPU coolers are backed with a 5-year warranty by Corsair, guaranteed to outlast your current system build.
Aircooling
Today we have the latest and greatest from Corsair and Antec connected to our test system as we put the H80 and Kuhler 920 head to head in order to find out which is best. Can Corsair (and CoolIT's) latest design beat the critically acclaimed Asetek/Antec model?
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