Raijintek Triton Review 33

Raijintek Triton Review

Installation »

A Closer Look


The Raijintek Triton is an expandable AIO with an ever-popular 240 mm radiator. Raijintek made use of compression fittings to keep the tubing in place. Sadly, the fittings are all glued in place and cannot be removed. The tubing has an inner diameter of 9.5 mm, an outer diameter of 12.5 mm, and is roughly 17 inches long. The radiator has a fins-per-inch (FPI) count of 22 and is 32 mm thick.


Raijintek's logo on top of the pump/block/reservoir is easy to spot. The compression fittings are not quite on par with the likes of, say, Bitspower, but they work well enough and hold the tubing in place securely. The tank is made of acrylic, and Raijintek made a point of pre-installing the crossbar that secures the pump to the motherboard to the tank. The 3-pin header for the pump, however, is very short, and I can see some users running into issues with it. As for the nickel-plated copper base? It appears to have a near-perfect mirror finish.


Raijintek's seven-bladed A1225S12S fans have an RPM range of 1000-2600. These fans unfortunately do not support PWM and are wired together to use one 3-pin connector and a variable resistor for manual speed control. I am surprised by the manual speed control and the way it has been implemented. Having to open the chassis to adjust fan speed is obnoxious; it is that or a front-panel fan controller, which is another expenditure to consider. Raijintek will hopefully switch to PWM fans in a future revision as such would make far more sense.
Next Page »Installation
View as single page
Apr 23rd, 2024 08:20 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts