Monday, October 12th 2015
EK Releases Full-coverage Water Block for Intel 750 Series PCIe SSD
EK Water Blocks, Ljubljana based premium liquid cooling gear manufacturer, is proud to introduce its first solid-state drive water block - the EK-FC I750 SSD for Intel Solid-State Drive 750 Series. EK-FC I750 SSD is a Full-Cover water block for water cooling the Intel SSD 750 Series solid-state drive. Designed in cooperation with Intel, we followed the overall look of the original passive cooler and made sure the entire PCB is covered, thus delivering the best possible cooling performance.
The water block features a high flow design allowing it to be easily used with systems using weaker water pumps. The base is made of nickel-plated electrolytic copper while the top cover is made of stainless steel. Screw-in brass standoffs are pre-installed and allow for safe, painless installation procedure. Enclosed is the additional EK-FC Terminal with two G1/4" threaded ports on the side (right picture below). Customers might need it if there isn't enough space to install the fittings on a regular pre-installed terminal (left picture below).EK-FC I750 SSD is readily available for purchase through EK Webshop and Partner Reseller Network. MSR price with included VAT is 89.90€.
The water block features a high flow design allowing it to be easily used with systems using weaker water pumps. The base is made of nickel-plated electrolytic copper while the top cover is made of stainless steel. Screw-in brass standoffs are pre-installed and allow for safe, painless installation procedure. Enclosed is the additional EK-FC Terminal with two G1/4" threaded ports on the side (right picture below). Customers might need it if there isn't enough space to install the fittings on a regular pre-installed terminal (left picture below).EK-FC I750 SSD is readily available for purchase through EK Webshop and Partner Reseller Network. MSR price with included VAT is 89.90€.
20 Comments on EK Releases Full-coverage Water Block for Intel 750 Series PCIe SSD
That being said, this is more for gamers/system builders that already have a water cooling loop, and want to add a 750 series. Cost is of little-to-no factor.
mainly because the MSRP of this is nearly close to the price i paid for the Kryographics Hawaii nickel-ed copper black edition (plexi) block i got for my 290 back in the day (even if i count the backplate )
i miss water cooled PSUs, a 1500 W PSU with a 90% efficiency will dump 166 Watt into the air.
But shure these are for guys who has a loop already. its pretty stupid to build a water cooling just for this ssd's
The 750 series SSD from Intel can pull up to 22W under sustained load. That's not a ton of heat to dissipate and I think the stock heatsink should be good enough. Watercooling has never been about being good enough, though.
Perhaps a water cooled Modem.
Some dude on O/C.com
When can I water cool my phone?really?
I guess I am a bit queasy, after googling this stuff.
I need another glass of Whiskey, and try to forget this post, and this thread.
:rolleyes:
:confused:
:toast:
yeah yeah ... pretty much like any component in your computer .... yet we do watercool them (ok 110/220V is not 5/12V but still ) PS(u): when i had my dual loop my CPU loop pump and res were exactly on the PSU xD
also as you can see on the pics above ... a leak would pretty much do nothing. (not on the second one tho... that one is scary xD )
leak are a "user added feature", if the loop is done right: little risk of leak yeah ... they call that watercooling as a marketing argument for naive buyer ... heatpipe is not watercool
just like the Xperia Z5 Premium : that's not a watercooling otherwise we should say that all Laptops are watercooled, and they are not :D