120 mm radiator: More surface area for superior cooling performance Improved cold plate and pump design: Better efficiency gives you lower temperatures with less noise Easy mounting: Quick and easy installation Enhanced SP120L PWM fan design: Better high-static pressure air delivery and customisable speed Dimensions: 27 x 13.5 x 21.5 cm
Top comments
ollie87
23 Jun 174#6
Have you not heard of our lord and saviour Noctua?
Latest comments (19)
Karlos457
24 Jun 17#16
So I'm think this is probably a bad idea, but would one of these coolers work well at all if I used it as an exhaust fan on my PC case rather than an intake? My Nano S uses 140 intakes and 120 exhausts.
hugekebab to Karlos457
25 Jun 17#19
in reality it won't make much difference.
eggmanpete
23 Jun 17#5
How loud is the pump on these? Had an all in one water cooler before and it was far too loud (H110i)
Latterman to eggmanpete
23 Jun 17#8
Pump on the H100i, H110i (GT) etc should not be loud at all. You may have had a faulty unit.
hugekebab to eggmanpete
25 Jun 17#18
never heard the pump on mine but that might be because the of the loud fan.
PaulTheo
23 Jun 171#2
Works well but the fan is a bit noisy. The fan is easily changed if required though.
Can you change the fans to an LED version?
Sorry if silly question but never owned one of these so not sure how they are powered and if it's possible. Tempted to move to liquid cooled and this seems a good deal!
adamspencer95
23 Jun 17#13
cant afford a couple of computer fans but can afford >£300 computer monitors and new LG TVs?
hm..
richard_ha
23 Jun 171#10
How much would I have to add for a quiet fan? Could anyone recommend one?
Gentle_Giant to richard_ha
23 Jun 17#12
Arctic Cooling F12 or a similar sized Noctura; the Noc's are better, but also much more expensive.
Running at full speed, I cannot hear the F12's, even though I have them mounted outside of the case and no more than 50cm from my ear; the H45 pump is also inaudible.
I also have an Aerocool DS (Deep Silence) Cube case, with the stock Aerocool fan that is much louder than the H45/F12 set up (although still very quiet).
Gentle_Giant
23 Jun 17#11
I have, but as I have been unemployed for over 18 months, F12's were all I could afford.
Also, I have had bad luck with Noctua's, NOT the fans fault. I fitted some to an old Dell USFF to help cool it down, as the old Dell fans were noisy and inefficient.
It turns out Dell had set a VERY small band of acceptable fan rpms in BIOS*; and rather than give a fan rpm warning, it just decided to switch the fan off entirely - frying the cpu.
* and with no way to view or change them.
dnichols48
23 Jun 171#9
ordered then noticed no support for am4 platform....pity would have used in a new ryzen build.
Oliver_Warden8
23 Jun 171#7
Brillant hahaha!
ollie87
23 Jun 174#6
Have you not heard of our lord and saviour Noctua?
Gentle_Giant
23 Jun 17#4
I have one of these, it is amazing, you have to spend better than double to get anything that performs as well, it blows the H60 & H80 out of the water. Supposedly it is all down to a new improved pump design.
As above, the fan is not quiet, in fact in my case, it quickly developed a nasty buzzing right around the RPM sweet spot. I tried a few alternatives, and settled on two Arctic F12's running push/pull.
This rad lets me run my 3.4GHz hexacore cpu at 5GHz; in fact it is limited by the SB getting too hot, rather than the cpu, which max'es out at 55C under Prime95.
Inquisitor
23 Jun 17#3
Agreed with Fan is v noisy vs none standard fans, however, having read that if you can fit a 2x radiator version it would be much better performance, it was on here for around £45, was tempted for my gpu but I don't game enough to warrant that.
Opening post
Improved cold plate and pump design: Better efficiency gives you lower temperatures with less noise
Easy mounting: Quick and easy installation
Enhanced SP120L PWM fan design: Better high-static pressure air delivery and customisable speed
Dimensions: 27 x 13.5 x 21.5 cm
Top comments
Latest comments (19)
http://www.ebuyer.com/730200-deepcool-maelstrom-240t-liquid-cpu-cooler-maelstrom-240t
Sorry if silly question but never owned one of these so not sure how they are powered and if it's possible. Tempted to move to liquid cooled and this seems a good deal!
hm..
Running at full speed, I cannot hear the F12's, even though I have them mounted outside of the case and no more than 50cm from my ear; the H45 pump is also inaudible.
I also have an Aerocool DS (Deep Silence) Cube case, with the stock Aerocool fan that is much louder than the H45/F12 set up (although still very quiet).
Also, I have had bad luck with Noctua's, NOT the fans fault. I fitted some to an old Dell USFF to help cool it down, as the old Dell fans were noisy and inefficient.
It turns out Dell had set a VERY small band of acceptable fan rpms in BIOS*; and rather than give a fan rpm warning, it just decided to switch the fan off entirely - frying the cpu.
* and with no way to view or change them.
As above, the fan is not quiet, in fact in my case, it quickly developed a nasty buzzing right around the RPM sweet spot. I tried a few alternatives, and settled on two Arctic F12's running push/pull.
This rad lets me run my 3.4GHz hexacore cpu at 5GHz; in fact it is limited by the SB getting too hot, rather than the cpu, which max'es out at 55C under Prime95.