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Reviews Around The Web
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
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Thursday, June 5, 2008
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Thermaltake has made water cooling easy with the Bigwater 760i 2U Drive Bay Liquid Cooling System. This system is internal and fits nicely into two empty drive bays in your case. This system has everything that you need to get started, even coolant and tubing. This is the first water cooling system that I have ever built and found it quite easy and fun to install. This system provides many nice features even the water cooling guru would find attractive. Read on further to find out what they are.
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Thursday, March 27, 2008
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For my first venture into water I learned a lot, and the main thing is that it?s not nearly as hard or complicated as I thought. That may be due to the Thermaltake Bigwater 760i kit, but either way the whole process was very easy. It took all of 30 minutes to do the pre-install and fill the system, the long part was the bleeding the air from the system and leak test. I chose to do this out of the case for the fact it was easier to fill the tank and work the bubbles out of the lines. That and the nagging thought of a leak...
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Thursday, February 28, 2008
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Overall, the Thermaltake 760i BigWater Liquid Cooling System is one efficient compact liquid cooling system. Not only does it integrate nicely in to your chassis, it'll also compliment most any system you want to assemble. Thermaltake took the time to preassemble some things and make the installation process much simpler. All these factors have made it a very easy system to use and should be simple enough for any and every user wanting to make a change in the way the CPU is cooled.
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Thursday, February 14, 2008
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Thermaltake Big Water 760i proves that a liquid cooling system is still a rational choice: given the performance is a bit higher and the pump quieter, we would have got an absolute must have!
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Tuesday, January 22, 2008
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If you thought about liquid-cooling your PC, but were put off by the complexity of a typical installation, Thermaltake's BigWater 760i may be the solution for you. The drive-bay mounting system is a novel solution, but can it provide enough of an advantage over air-cooling to make it worthwhile?
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Monday, January 7, 2008
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This system is a bit different from other liquid coolers I've reviewed - rather than mounting it outside the case or on the side panel, this system is uses up two of 5 1/4 drive bays, keeping it out of the way of other components. Let's see how this setup works and more importantly, how it performs.
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Tuesday, November 20, 2007
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Internal liquid cooling system components are usually separate pieces, which do require a little extra space in your case, something mid-tower owners may not be able to afford. It also adds complexity and additional time to the installation when the end user has to put everything together themselves. But Thermaltake now has a solution for both problems, the Bigwater 760i.
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Thursday, November 1, 2007
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Splish, splash, does your processor need a bath? Thermaltake seems to think so, and today HardwareLogic looks at their Bigwater 760i water cooling kit.
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Monday, October 15, 2007
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Water cooling kits are becoming more popular on the mainstream market due to lower price and new, easier ways of setup. It is also being used more and more for components other than CPU, like graphics cards or even memory. This time we're looking at the Thermaltake's Bigwater 760i all-in-one water cooling solution that can be installed into two 5.25" bays.
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Wednesday, September 26, 2007
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Thermaltake's new BigWater 760i watercooling kit is an affordable and compact solution to users who are are afraid of the cost or the complexity of a full kit. It is easy to install, so even less experienced people can get their feet wet with watercooling.
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