The CoolWhip™ Liquid Series.
| CoolWhip™ Liquid is also own
development and trademark. These Liquid Coolers have
exceptionally high performance compact outer dimensions,
this goes for both the heat Exchanger and the cooling
Head, on top it does not generate as much noise as pure
Air based Cooler systems does. In fact you can select
between almost silent operation at less accelerated
overclocking, or full boost just by turning up or down
the juice to the single intake Fan. |
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| Because the cooling Head is made of
Copper and contains the patented "complex folded
thin fins" inside, it has an
outstanding low thermal resistance not seen on any other
liquid Cooling head in the World, and because
the heat exchanger has been developed for optimum
performance too, the overall efficiency of the system is below 0,05ºC/Watt, resulting
in a temperature rise of less than 10ºC on the cooling
Head with a 200W total system load. CoolWhip™ Liquid is designed for use with both Celeron and Pentium III (one at a time though), which means that you can use it on a Pentium III, if you should happen to come across money, or Intel chooses to lower its price even further. CoolWhip™ Liquid with 120x120mm Fan, is supplied in a Big M.F. HighTower Case, ready to use with Liquid (none hazardous/none flammable) on the system. You just need to mount your MB, HD etc. and your CPU on the cooling Head incl. good insulation which is also included. |
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| Only the two top 5 1/4" slot is
used for extra venting purposes with the CoolWhip™
Liquid system, so there should still be plenty of room
for HD's, CD-Rom drives , CD-Writers, DVD drives... You
can see the extra ventilation in the Top Slot in the
picture to the right. If you look thoroughly on the
picture, you'll notice the little switch between the two
LED's. This switch controls the speed of the fan on the
heat exchanger, and let you choose between the High-power
(and somewhat noisier) mode, and the Low-power (nearly
whisper quiet) mode. This way, you can leave it at the
Low-power setting when using normal business programs,
and switch to the High-power mode when you want to use
high end programs like 3D rendering, processing large
images, or the ultimate CPU hog...FPS (First Person
Shooter) games like Quake3. Together with the sound insulating foam in the air tunnel, this results in a fairly low noise system. |
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| CoolWhip™ Liquid is mounted with
an Air intake filter in front of the Fan on the Heat
exchanger, ensuring optimal cooling at any time. This is
most likely the prime concern for maintenance on this
cooling system, namely exchanging or at least vacuum
cleaning the intake filter once in a while, when it seems
difficult to maintain a sufficiently low
temperature. You can also see the 110/220V (approved) AC outlet, that goes to the relay that turns on the pump, and TEC's (only on the 120/120 and 120/160 models). |
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| The
heat exchanger is developed for optimum cooling
efficiency, and produced from very robust materials. In
the development process parameters such as Air resistance
contra air flow and cooling efficiency, as well as
multiple layers and stages have all been taken into
consideration to provide the maximum possible Cooling
capability at lowest possible sound level within the
dimensions of a PC Case. Expected lifetime on the heat exchanger is app. 20 years, and we provide a 5 year warranty on it. The same goes for the cooling Head, but we doubt many will operate with the same Processor for that long! |
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| CoolWhip™ Liquid provides you
with a cooling System for the next many, many years. You
do never need to concern about which cooling solution to
choose for your next PC. The only thing you need to do,
in case the new CPU doesn't fit on the Coolplate, is
exchanging that, all the rest is reuse. Only if you
entirely change CPU platform, you may need to exchange
the Cooling Head itself. Exchanging the Cooling Head is very environmental friendly, and not very complicated, the only thing you need is a couple of drops of cooling Liquid almost like what you use for your car. The hoses in the system are made of highly flexible and acid resistant clear silicone material with a solid wall-thickness. It is the cooling Liquid that gives it the nice light-blue color you see on the picture to the right. |
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| Well, except for the pump down below, the 120mm version does not consume more space than what you see here. The heat Exchanger itself resides just over the Power Supply, and doesn't take up much space. Concerning noise, there only is this single one 120mm Fan left on contrary to many other high performance cooling solutions. This fan you can actually obtain in several variants, from the very low noise 3,2 Watts (for the choosy and less aggressive overclocker, preferring listening to silent classical music, while knocking down everything that moves in Quake II) over to a pure 7 Watts tornado Fan, for the Hardcore Overclocker, who doesn't mind sitting with headphones (read: hearing protection) as long as it runs real fast. | ![]() |
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It is not
particular difficult to mount, but you most likely cannot fit it
into your mini-tower, the heat Exchanger simply takes up too much
space for that. Additionally you have to use a pair of metal
scissors, if you mount it in your own Big Tower, as the hole for
the Fan needs fitting for the 120mm Fan instead of the 80mm Fan,
it was designed for.
Alternatively You can select placing it across inside your
Cabinet, taking air in from one side, and exhausting it on the
other, whereby you maintain the upper slot available for other
purposes, and at the same time lowering the temperature inside
your Cabinet, as the exhaust from the heat Exchanger no longer
adds to the heat inside the Cabinet.
You could of course also choose to place the heat Exchanger
entirely outside the PC Case, just to make a show of it.