About this deal
Touching closer on the included cooling fans, ID-COOLING have included 2 x 120mm PWM supported fans with a dynamic range of 800-2000RPM. Of course, at full speed these will be very noisy, but I can’t imagine many scenarios where the CPU will be bombing at 100% constantly other than rendering, in some poorly coded games and when benchmarking/using LINX. The maximum rated airflow of these fans at 2000RPM is 84.5CFM which is impressive, but of course with a radiator impeding air flow, the figures will be much lower in reality. The 2 x 120mm included fans simply screw on with the included long threaded screws. There are 4 for each fan and although there are spares, these are for those wishing to go push/pull with 4 fans for maximum performance.
ID-COOLING FrostFlow 120 AIO Cooler Review | Play3r
Inside a PC, a stereo amplifier, or a smartphone, one red line runs through them all: The circuits inside generate heat, and something's got to keep things cool. The hardware used to keep PC components from overheating has undergone a revolution over the last decade, with once-rare liquid coolers now widely used in high-performance desktops and some cooling hardware playing a key cosmetic role in show-off gaming rigs and custom builds.We are keen to ensure that you have the freedom to choose what your new Liquid Series® system looks like! Choose the kit that suits you, with options to include the GPU into the loop, the colour of the braided cables, coolant and lighting! The one down side that I witnessed was that the pump is fairly noisy. This was perhaps exaggerated by running it on our open-air test bench, and it wouldn’t be as distracting when installed into a case, but it was still the loudest I have come across for quite a while. Design To ensure reliability, performance and premium quality, we offer the option to use ASUS RoG STRIX graphics for our Liquid Series® water cooled PCs.
COOLING FROSTFLOW X 240 CPU Water Cooler AIO Cooler 240mm ID-COOLING FROSTFLOW X 240 CPU Water Cooler AIO Cooler 240mm
Very much agree on the PSU as well, you’d don’t configure it to your current needs, if the pc is configured correctly it should last 7 years or so with minor upgrades, those upgrades can only be done if there’s headroom on the PSU.I'm actually unsure if the cooler being talked about here is the same as the PCS one. Looking at the ends of the heatpipes they look minorly different, although I'm sure it will do a very similar job.