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Tuesday, June 10, 2008
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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Wednesday, April 23, 2008
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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Tuesday, October 2, 2007
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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Tuesday, March 13, 2007
For those that are familiar with water cooling the CoolIT Eliminator uses the same basic method, but uses three solid-state TECs to cool the coolant down rather than a traditional radiator. Water is pumped from the +12V water pump through tubing to the CPU water block. Once the coolant leaves the water block it becomes 'hot' and is cooled down by going through not one, but three TECs. This process works really well as the cold side of the TEC plate can easily cool the water, but the heat from the hot side of the plate still needs to be handled. To get rid of the heat generated from the TECs, CoolIT uses a radial heat sink to absorb the heat. A 92x92x38mm fan then sucks air through the radial heat sink and blows the air out of the case...
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