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Reviews Around The Web
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
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Monday, October 26, 2009
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We're firing up the office style NFL pool again, and we have at least 4 weeks of prizes to give away. This week's prize is sponsored by CoolIT Systems. Up for grabs is one of their award winning Domino A.L.C. (Advanced Liquid Cooling) CPU Coolers.
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Tuesday, July 29, 2008
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The CoolIT Systems coolers are certainly a unique way to get into liquid cooling. They come pre-assembled and are maintenance free. We are taking a look at their dual card cooler for two GeForce 8800 GTXs, but CoolIT offers a very similar variant for the GTX 260/280 and for AMD cards as well.
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Tuesday, June 10, 2008
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Some things are just simple, straightforward and efficient; this describes the CoolIt Eliminator in a few words as that is just what it is. No filling of a reservoir, no messing with a bunch of tubes that may leak and absolutely no problems with any assembly, as none is needed here. For those who have ever installed a custom liquid system, you know the vigorous details it entails to take on this task. The Eliminator is a stress saver in the very least in that respect. The Eliminator is also very silent and makes your system run much quieter than one using a large blowing fan to keep CPU temperatures down to their minimum.
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Thursday, May 22, 2008
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The CoolIT Freezone uses the age-old Peltier concept to try and keep your CPU's temperature under control. Does it work? We find out...
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Sunday, May 18, 2008
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The Freezone Elite will definitely beat anything you can likely build to fit in anywhere near the same space by a mile - let alone any pre-built kits. But its price class puts it in a whole different realm, which is why I built such a big system to compare it to. An enthusiast is going to look at what he or she can build for a similar cost, not just what fits in the same space. The watercooling system I compared to costs around £200 in the UK (and $320 in the US) - that's about £50 less, and it's quieter and cooler. However, every time I need to make a change, I invest twenty minutes in undoing everything, draining the loop, etc. And that's in a case that's designed for it.
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Friday, May 9, 2008
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Companies like CoolIT Systems played a large role in turning water cooling into a mainstream practice by making it available on a large scale, even getting their products in the hands of big box builders like Alienware. Today we are going to look at CoolIT's latest water-cooled processor heatsink, the PURE. CoolIT calls their cooling systems "Fluid Heat Exchangers" and have been building their FHEs for a couple of years now.
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Wednesday, April 23, 2008
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The CoolIT Eliminator CPU Heatsink arrived Technic3D. The Eliminator CPU Cooler includes: a Chiller/Pump Module, a Thermal Control Module (TCM), and a CPU Fluid Heat Exchanger (FHE). This universal sealed closed-loop maintenance free system is pre-plumbed and charged for simple bolt-in installation. See you in the following Review the Eleminator on a Intel XE6800 CPU compared with Standard Boxed Cooling, Watercooling and the Titan Amanda.
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Friday, April 4, 2008
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With the PURE being a sealed system it is ok for the fact that it is maintenance free. The downside is that it is not expandable. Another downside is that air that is trapped in the system is there forever. The unit I tested had some air trapped in it. It took a good 3 days of it sitting upright to stop gurgling. After that it was good to go, just as long as I didn't bump the case or disturb the cooler in any way...
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Thursday, April 3, 2008
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Let's be honest, CPU coolers are not usually the most exciting product in the world. We all need one, or two, and the quieter the better. Many users also want to ensure that the performance of their cooler allows them to reduce the CPU temperature as much as possible and maybe even dabble in some overclocking without risking the processors long term health. There are of course enthusiast users who want to get as much performance as possible out of their components and for that they require some serious cooling. These are exactly the users that CoolIT are targeting with their pre-plumbed and factory sealed Freezone Elite which makes use of maintenance refrigerated liquid. For the beginner enthusiast or more price conscious user the Pure CPU cooler shares many of the same components as the Elite and we will be taking a look at both products today.
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Monday, February 11, 2008
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Having the ability to overclock a Quad-Core processor while keeping your machine quiet used to be a pipe-dream, until CoolIT's latest CPU cooler came into the picture. With the PURE, we managed a nice 3.67GHz clock on our QX6850, all while being able to hear our hard drives over the cooler.
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Friday, January 25, 2008
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Nothing beats an ice cold drink which stays cold to the last drop, so an investment in a CoolIT Beverage Chiller would be very attractive to gamers and enthusiasts. The Chiller does a great job of chilling drinks and I recommend this product to any enthusiast looking to stay cool.
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Wednesday, January 23, 2008
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During CoolIT's CES-presence this month, the Freezone Elite was unveiled. In addition to offering stellar performance comparable to the original, the new MTEC control center is thrown in as well. This self-regulating module proved to do a fantastic job, making the Elite a superb cooling solution.
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Friday, November 30, 2007
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There is nothing worse than expecting frosty, bubbly, sugary goodness and being met with flat, lukewarm backwash. Immediately your reflexes kick in and you spew the concoction all over your monitor, which splashes onto your monitor, keyboard and computer. The liquid immediately shorts out your motherboard, the sugar gums up your keyboard, and the acid removes the film from your LCD monitor. Oh, and you get brain cancer. Thousands of dollars could have been saved if you only had some way of keeping your beverage of choice frosty-cold while you go about saving the world. CoolIT has the solution in a USB-powered Beverage Chiller. They do it because they feel morally obligated to protect the accident-prone gaming community from disasters such as this, thus preserving our communities and life as we know it.
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Tuesday, October 2, 2007
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These two all-in-one water cooling units from CoolIT provide plug and play performance cooling with help of several TEC elements to keep CPU load temperatures down. We stress test the Eliminator and Freezone models on an overclocked Intel processors to see how they stack up against the competition.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2007
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Now, CoolIT has entered the fray with a new type of water-cooling unit with their Freezone CPU Cooler. Unlike traditional systems, the Freezone does not use a radiator, but uses a proprietary "chiller", which uses multiple TECs (peltier plates) to cool the liquid coolant, essentially refrigerating the liquid without a compressor (as expensive phase-change coolers use). This system provides greater thermal efficiency and increased reliability, and is easier to install than full-sized water-cooling kits.
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