Monday, January 12th 2015
EVGA GeForce GTX 980 HydroCopper Pictured
With the GeForce GTX 980 HydroCopper, EVGA changed the "HydroCopper" brand. In earlier generations, HydroCopper denoted a factory-overclocked reference PCB, with a factory-fitted, full-coverage water-block, which you added to a liquid-cooling loop of your own. The new card comes with its very own closed-loop cooler, much like AMD's reference Radeon R9 295X2.
The card's cooler features a metal base-plate which conveys heat drawn from the memory and VRM, in part to the centrally located pump-block, and in part to an aluminium fin stack. A common lateral-flow blower ventilates the two. The central pump-block looks typical Asetek fare, with a pair of tubes driving coolant to and from the reservoir+radiator assembly, which is ventilated by a single 120 mm fan. The underlying PCB appears to be reference NVIDIA.
The card's cooler features a metal base-plate which conveys heat drawn from the memory and VRM, in part to the centrally located pump-block, and in part to an aluminium fin stack. A common lateral-flow blower ventilates the two. The central pump-block looks typical Asetek fare, with a pair of tubes driving coolant to and from the reservoir+radiator assembly, which is ventilated by a single 120 mm fan. The underlying PCB appears to be reference NVIDIA.
16 Comments on EVGA GeForce GTX 980 HydroCopper Pictured
Very cheap looking.
It looks like something they would sell you at Best Buy, and two days later it broke.
Pretty sure I have better water cooling parts in the back of my toilet.
EVGA fanboys will buy anything though...
I do have to say calling this though the HydroCopper is a bit of an odd idea though since they already have a HydroCopper full block variant and that is what people are accustomed to. Might have been a better idea to name this something else.
Guess it just must be more cost effective to slap a AIO on it instead of getting an OEM to spec out a block. (Since its really unnecessary anyways)
The model might also be testing the waters for future SKU's ( a dual GM 204 model?) and as a PR answer to Gigabyte's triple AIO mostrocity.