Tuesday, March 1st 2011

Corsair Announces First Shipments of Hydro Series H60

Corsair, a worldwide designer and supplier of high-performance components to the PC gaming hardware market, today announced shipments of the new Hydro Series H60 High-Performance Liquid CPU Cooler. The Hydro Series H60 brings remarkable new technologies to the CPU cooling market at an affordable price point. New features include:
  • A low-profile, light-weight cooling unit that reduces clutter around the CPU
  • A redesigned microchannel cold plate with a new fin design that dramatically increases the surface area of copper available for heat absorption
  • A new split-flow manifold that delivers coolant directly to the center of the cold plate - the warmest area of the CPU - significantly improving cooling efficiency
  • A custom-designed 120mm fan with very high static pressure, which allows for more cold air to be drawn through the radiator to vent heat from the cooling liquid
  • Compatibility with the recently announced Corsair Link system for monitoring and control
"Corsair brought reliable, easy-to-install liquid CPU cooling systems to the masses with the groundbreaking Hydro Series H50," said Ruben Mookerjee, VP and General Manager for Components at Corsair. "With the new H60, Corsair provides a new level of performance, ease of installation, and affordability."

The Hydro Series H60 is currently shipping to distributors and resellers worldwide and should be available from Corsair-authorized retailers in the Americas, Europe, and Asia in early March. The Hydro Series H60 is available for a US suggested retail price of $79 USD.
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24 Comments on Corsair Announces First Shipments of Hydro Series H60

#1
PhysXerror
So is the performance in between the h50 and h70?
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#2
LAN_deRf_HA
Sounds like the pump and block is better than the H70, the rad will hold it back though. If you felt ambitious you could mod on a double thick rad and have yourself a H80 before anyone else.
Posted on Reply
#3
Loosenut
See the size of the microfins? I'd be worried about air pockets because of water surface tension. Or maybe they have additives to combat surface tension like water wetter or something...

The base finish sucks too
Posted on Reply
#4
stupido
his looks very similar to Antec Kühler H2O 620... of course, the pump is square instead circle... :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#5
pantherx12
LoosenutSee the size of the microfins? I'd be worried about air pockets because of water surface tension. Or maybe they have additives to combat surface tension like water wetter or something...

The base finish sucks too
They squirt a bit of washing up liquid in everyone one :toast: XD
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#6
mxjcmxjc
This is a thing of beauty :eek:. Can't wait till the review pour in for it.
Posted on Reply
#7
Laurijan
Looks like the CPU-blocks surface could need some lapping
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#8
claylomax
Mmm ... another Asetek cooler.
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#9
1Kurgan1
The Knife in your Back
Didn't know there was plans for more than 1 model of these, might have to look around and pick one up for the fiancees tower.
Posted on Reply
#10
ASharp
claylomaxMmm ... another Asetek cooler.
Except it's made by CoolIT. :rolleyes:
Posted on Reply
#11
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
stupidohis looks very similar to Antec Kühler H2O 620... of course, the pump is square instead circle... :laugh:
its also coolit...
claylomaxMmm ... another Asetek cooler.
damn he beat me to it :/
ASharpExcept it's made by CoolIT. :rolleyes:
yup its coolit
Posted on Reply
#12
Delta6326
I hope this does good ive been wanting to overclock my Q6600 more but my air just doesn't keep it in my safe range don't like it to go above 50c:p
Posted on Reply
#14
sneekypeet
Retired Super Moderator
cdawallits also coolit...



damn he beat me to it :/



yup its coolit
CoolIt doesn't make the 620 its built by Asetek;)

AFAIK CoolIt no longer has ties to Asetek.
Posted on Reply
#15
Undead46
Got a Noctua NH-D14 less than a month ago; I'd like to see how these two compare.
Posted on Reply
#16
sneekypeet
Retired Super Moderator
so Google for the reviews for the H20-620;)
Posted on Reply
#17
Shou Miko
damn i kinda like this photo:




so maybe i should go from air to water, but is it safe to run for 24-7 use? or will it expire too soon on it's life time? :(
Posted on Reply
#18
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
running the H70 on my clarkdale 560ES for 4 or 5 months now no hickups and the H50 i have on another PC has been going for a while as well

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#19
Radical_Edward
Looks like a better mounting system, I might just have to pick one of these up for my rig and put the H50 in Lauren's rig.
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#20
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
Radical_EdwardLooks like a better mounting system, I might just have to pick one of these up for my rig and put the H50 in Lauren's rig.
the asetek is easier to swap cpu's
Posted on Reply
#21
Dave65
Looks nice,but no way will I switch my H70 double thick radiator and go back to a thinner one..It would have to be one hell of a difference in cooling for an H70 user to want to switch..
Posted on Reply
#22
Disparia
So these pump blocks can't be bought separately?
Posted on Reply
#23
xbonez
puma99dk|so maybe i should go from air to water, but is it safe to run for 24-7 use? or will it expire too soon on it's life time
Been running an H50 24x7 for a little over an year now and no issues at all. If you clean the rad every now and then, it performs just a well as the day you bought it.

The first thing I did when i got my H50 was switch out the Corsair fan for two Yate Loons in pull-push.
Posted on Reply
#24
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
Cant wait for them to break out a dual rad like 2x120 or 2x140 with push pull config.
Posted on Reply
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