The components inside your PC generate heat. Your standard heat-sink-and-fan combo is usually sufficient for the average user, but when you push your components harder, they’ll run hotter. If you want ...
In brief: Custom liquid-cooled PCs usually look fantastic, but they can be a lot of work, expensive, and introduce potential problems, such as leaks. Imagine, then, the amount of effort and money that ...
Water-cooled PCs generally have in common that there’s a radiator somewhere in the loop, yet nobody said that you can’t build the PCB into the radiator. Something like a genuine ...
A company from China has unveiled a unique prebuilt PC with pre-installed liquid cooling and an open-frame chassis design. The iGame Neptune PC from Colorful sports a unique aesthetic thanks to its ...
There's no radiator, pump or reservoir inside this water-cooled PC. Instead, refrigeration engineer Matt Marshall had another idea - chilling the coolant inside an external icebox instead. The result ...
The MEGAMINI G1 is a small desktop computer designed for gaming. It features NIVDIA GeForce RTX 4060 graphics, a 13th-gen Intel Core H-series processor configured to run at up to 65 watts, and a ...
While there are off-the-shelf PC desk chassis available, if you want a desk that meets your exact requirements you'll need to build it yourself, and this water-cooled desk PC is a fantastic example.
If you’ve ever wanted legitimate liquid cooling for your gaming smartphone, then mobile device purveyor OnePlus seems poised to provide such a technology, at least in theory. The OnePlus 11 Concept, ...
In early April, I reviewed the EK 275 Conquest. It’s a gaming PC built with custom liquid cooling, which brought forth years of misconceptions, bad advice, and dated ideas about custom liquid cooling ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. Keeping your computer cool is essential for optimal performance. When a PC starts to overheat, the processor frequency will drop (thermal ...
Today Mat is checking out a new laptop from PCSpecialist with a pretty neat trick up its sleeve - it supports external watercooling! But what difference does that actually make when running the thing?