This stylish water reservoir slides into your computer's 5.25" drive bay and plugs into both 1/4" or 3/8" tubing. With its 120mm Fan it can work as the system's primary radiator or add it in to an existing system to boost the cooling capacity.
Total Reviews: 3
Average Rating: 
poorly designed
05-25-2008
Reviewer: eRazorzEDGE (7)
first off, i have a swifty apogee gtx cpu block, XSPC 150mm finned aluminum reservoir, swifty mcp655b pump and this rad... and this rad barely keeps the temps n the range of my old air cooled Zalman HSF. When system is under load, temps only rise about 10°C at 1st, then gradually, as the water absorbs more heat and the rad continues to not dissipate that heat very well, temps start 2 climb another 5+°C. it takes a while 4 the water temps 2 come back down. plus it uses 1/4 copper tubing with some weird thread fittings - not standard. so basically, there''s no point n having anything more than 1/4 inch tube n ur loop. i would definitely not buy again.
Good Substitute
04-14-2007
Reviewer: Patch (2)
If you don''t have a spot for a regular radiator and you don''t want to mod and potentially ruin that lovely case of yours, and you have 2 drive bays to spare, this is your radiator. Fan is silent, you won''t notice it unless your case itself has the rattles and shakes.
If you really have only one drive bay and really need the space, I guess you can remove the radiator fan, but I don''t condone this as I have not tested it myself.
I guess the only drawback is that when there''s a fan down there, you have to vacate an extra bay.
Very good radiator
12-23-2006
Reviewer: Soophaman (2)
I just got two of these for my first water cooling system. They are AMAZING! I got the Koolance RP-1000, so everything is in the bays of my Lian-Li PC-V2100B Plus II. I highly recommend it to anyone wishing for a well built radiator, and to those afraid of drilling in their case to install a radiator. (like me)