ID Cooling Release CPU and GPU AIO Watercooler

WYP

News Guru
ID-COOLING officially releases the world's first integrated AIO water cooler for CPU & GPU with one radiator two pumps design, named HUNTER DUET.

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Read more on the ID Cooling Hunter Duet CPU+GPU AIO Water cooler here.
 
Not a bad shout, not something I'd buy personally but thier the first to do so.

Anyone wanting to watercool CPU and GPU but lack the knowledge of a custom loop thus could be ideal.... hopefully the benchmarks prove it to be a success.
 
What's supposed to keep the video card's VRMs cool, hopes and dreams? That fan isn't going to be enough for modern cards with TDP over 200W.
 
Aye, interesting product for client builds for example. Lots easier with building and warranty, plus they don't need to maintain it like a custom loop.

Can I just say those fans look awfully familiar though.
 
This is a rebadge of a product that OEMs (such as ASUS) have been using for a while. Cool to see it coming to consumers.
 
This would be an awesome product in places(namely were i live) were the market for water cooling PC's is as little as none, so getting water cooling components is virtually impossible with out huge shipping costs and no one to service them.

But would like to see that with more radiator options, even dual rad's would be cool :)
 
I actually quite like the idea of this, especially as I have zero interest in going down the custom loop route, the only experience of water cooling I have is on our old 30W Laser cutter.. hated it!

This would be an awesome product in places(namely were i live) were the market for water cooling PC's is as little as none, so getting water cooling components is virtually impossible with out huge shipping costs and no one to service them.

But would like to see that with more radiator options, even dual rad's would be cool :)
I would have thought cooling your system would be easy, if you live in Iceland, your ambients must be well low. :lol:
 
Can I just say those fans look awfully familiar though.

Aye, Corsair fans mate! :)

I actually quite like the idea of this, especially as I have zero interest in going down the custom loop route

How so if I my ask Wraith mate? :)

As much as I personally fancy the idea of it, I'd personally not get it. Due to it looks like being quite a hassle to install it lol and it doesn't appear aesthetically pleasing to me.

And as WYP mentioned in the article, that was my first thought upon this... "A 240 rad for both CPU and GPU?W... now that seems a bit faint at heart regarding cooling. Why not a 360 or so for a bit more "Umpf" in the cooling potential?.
 
How so if I my ask Wraith mate? :)

As much as I personally fancy the idea of it, I'd personally not get it. Due to it looks like being quite a hassle to install it lol and it doesn't appear aesthetically pleasing to me.

And as WYP mentioned in the article, that was my first thought upon this... "A 240 rad for both CPU and GPU?W... now that seems a bit faint at heart regarding cooling. Why not a 360 or so for a bit more "Umpf" in the cooling potential?.

Custom loops just don't float my boat and would just add to my cleaning routine (for me anyway), I'd find it an incovenience having to bleed and strip for deep cleans or upgrades but with this type of AIO cooling I'd be happy to have straight out the box and bolt on.. although, I'm with WYP on this it really does need a 360 or 280mm rad to be cooling both CPU & GPU comfortably.
 
Custom loops just don't float my boat and would just add to my cleaning routine (for me anyway), I'd find it an incovenience having to bleed and strip for deep cleans or upgrades but with this type of AIO cooling I'd be happy to have straight out the box and bolt on.. although, I'm with WYP on this it really does need a 360 or 280mm rad to be cooling both CPU & GPU comfortably.

Ahh okay, fair enough and kind my own thoughts and feelings on it as well :)

But will a 280 rad be enough though?... I mean, does Corsair's 280 make a huge difference compared to the H100i?...

A 360 would be more reasonable in my eyes atleast :)
 
i think they went 280 to increase the potential sales due to case size. I also think any one with a case that could happily hold a 360 rad would most probably go for a proper loop.

But a 280 rad will probably be enough for a cpu and gpu with low to mid oc's (provided its nothing stupid)
Also the design seems to be ignoring dual gpu or sli/xfire setups
So i imagine it really is more for the mid end gaming system that just wants quiet running rather than extreme cooling.
 
I would have thought cooling your system would be easy, if you live in Iceland, your ambients must be well low. :lol:

Well not true actually since we have hot water and cheap electricity so our ambient temp's are always around the 23°, regardless of how cold or hot it is outside :D
 
You'd still have to strip the graphics card to add the cooler so not for complete beginners. There are plenty of 120mm AIO's so for mid range cards and CPU's I guess it's not a bad idea if you're going for quiet and not needing to dissipate a lot of heat.

Plenty of mATX builds could fit them and yes zero maintenance is a plus. I've not touched my H100 in about three years apart from the initial RMA and a dust.

I just wonder why they need two pumps? Surely one slightly better one would be enough and probably cheaper?
 
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