Tuesday, January 6th 2015

Corsair Debuts Hydro Series H110i GT Liquid CPU Cooler and HG10 N780 Bracket

Corsair, a world leader in high-performance PC hardware, today announced the all-in-one Hydro Series H110i GT , the company's most advanced liquid CPU cooler, and a new Hydro Series HG10 N780 Edition GPU cooling bracket for NVIDIA GeForce 700 Series graphics cards.

The Hydro Series H110i GT liquid CPU cooler pairs two 140mm fans with a 140x322 millimeter radiator to deliver extreme CPU cooling in the most processor-intensive applications or quiet operation when the PC is idle. The H110i GT also features a new generation, high-efficiency cooling block with a striking new look with logo inserts on the block and radiator. Integrated Corsair Link support provides monitoring and customization of built-in logo lighting, fan speed, pump speed. As with all Hydro Series CPU coolers, the H110i GT is completely self-contained, requires no maintenance or filling.
  • 140mm x 322mm x 27mm aluminum radiator
  • Two SP140L 140mm high static pressure fans
  • Corsair Link support for customization and monitoring
  • Sleeved wide diameter, low evaporation rubber tubing
  • Support for Intel LGA 115x, 1366, 2011 and AMD AM2, AM3, FM1, FM2
  • 5-year limited warranty
  • MSRP: $129.99
Hydro Series HG10 N780 GPU Cooling Bracket
The Hydro Series HG10 N780 Edition GPU liquid cooling bracket allows users to adapt a Corsair Hydro Series liquid CPU cooler (not included) to an NVIDIA GeForce GPU. It's compatible with reference design NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770, GTX 780, GTX 780 Ti, Titan and Titan Black graphics cards, and installs quickly and easily, with only eight screws. The HG10 combined with a Corsair Hydro Series CPU liquid cooler can reduce the GPU's temperature by up to 45° C, and works with the GPU's automatic temperature control will lower the speed of its onboard fan for quieter operation. The HG10 bracket also helps cool the GPU's main processor and VRAM and VRMs, helping extend the life of the GPU and providing more overclocking headroom.
  • Allows any Corsair Hydro Series CPU cooler to be attached to and cool NVIDIA GeForce GPUs
  • Compatible with reference NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770, GTX 780, GTX 780 Ti, Titan and Titan Black graphics cards. See corsair.com for a full compatibility list
  • Reduces GPU temperatures by up to 45° C
  • Allows most GPUs to automatically reduce stock fan speed for quieter operation
  • Cools the main GPU processor, VRAM, and VRMs
  • 2-year limited warranty
  • MSRP: $39.99
Availability
The Hydro Series H110i GT liquid CPU coolers and HG10 N780 Edition GPU cooling brackets will be available in February from Corsair's worldwide network of authorized distributors and resellers.
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14 Comments on Corsair Debuts Hydro Series H110i GT Liquid CPU Cooler and HG10 N780 Bracket

#1
DeNeDe
700 series ? the ones that will be terminated soon enough ? :)
Posted on Reply
#2
Corsair George
Corsair Rep
DeNeDe700 series ? the ones that will be terminated soon enough ? :)
N970 and N980 editions coming soon. Still LOTS of 770, 780 guys out there who want to squeeze a bit more performance out of their cards. This will help.
Posted on Reply
#3
Icewind31
DeNeDe700 series ? the ones that will be terminated soon enough ? :)
the 900 series doesn't seem like it even need a fan with the kinda of power consumption they're at.
Posted on Reply
#4
Ferrum Master
Icewind31the 900 series doesn't seem like it even need a fan with the kinda of power consumption they're at.
Probably for stock cooler users who wan't to OC a bit, while remaining considerably silent.
Posted on Reply
#5
GreiverBlade
Corsair GeorgeN970 and N980 editions coming soon. Still LOTS of 770, 780 guys out there who want to squeeze a bit more performance out of their cards. This will help.
just a bit ... so, but the space needed for it is kinda ... well ... as long as you have a single card let's say you will be fine.

otherwise custom loop is still the way to go and i had no experience at all when i did my CPU and GPU loop, coming from a H60V2 (i had also a H70/H60V1 and a H100) i falsely relied on AIO because i thought custom would be too hard for me :roll:

well for those who like AIO this is a good announce i kinda like the look of the H110i GT, and my H60V2 will replace my OCZ Vendetta 2 in my C2D build :D
Posted on Reply
#6
peche
Thermaltake fanboy
btarunr
  • 140mm x 322mm x 27mm aluminum radiator
  • Two SP140L 140mm high static pressure fans
  • Corsair Link support for customization and monitoring
  • Sleeved wide diameter, low evaporation rubber tubing
  • Support for Intel LGA 115x, 1366, 2011 and AMD AM2, AM3, FM1, FM2
  • 5-year limited warranty
  • MSRP: $129.99
Nice looking kit…!
Specification of components is cool too!, nice price also.

Well done corsair
Posted on Reply
#7
bogami
Tubes are very thick essentially have within not more than 8 mm, which is very little. Cosmetic interventions do not cool the processor. But you can help with the pool posh fan on the radiator so that they be mounted 10 front and 10 rear, and the temperature of the air moving through the turbine will cool the liquid below 0 degrees Celsius. G.L.:laugh:
Hydro Series HG10 N780 Edition GPU cooling bracket has completely wrong fan which completely not cool mosfet units :shadedshu:.
Posted on Reply
#8
RejZoR
Is anyone else experiencing problems with these closed loop coolers if the radiator is positioned below the pump level? My Antec seems to grind horribly on cold system start and stops after like 2 minutes and becomes absolutely silent afterwards. It's so weird and I'm worried buying other closed loops if they all do the same. I just happen to have a weird case config where i have radiator on the bottom of case intake and the pump is above on the CPU socket. Cools really well on very low RPM, but this cold start grinding is super annoying.
Posted on Reply
#9
Icewind31
RejZoRIs anyone else experiencing problems with these closed loop coolers if the radiator is positioned below the pump level? My Antec seems to grind horribly on cold system start and stops after like 2 minutes and becomes absolutely silent afterwards. It's so weird and I'm worried buying other closed loops if they all do the same. I just happen to have a weird case config where i have radiator on the bottom of case intake and the pump is above on the CPU socket. Cools really well on very low RPM, but this cold start grinding is super annoying.
They're not supposed to unless they didn't get bled out correctly at the factory. I would get warranty replacement on that (if it's still within the period). That's the sound of air bubbles, they're probably getting pushed out until they get trapped in the radiator... though if the system is turned off the bubbles probably migrated back to the higher mounted pump.
Posted on Reply
#10
Sp33d Junki3
RejZoRIs anyone else experiencing problems with these closed loop coolers if the radiator is positioned below the pump level? My Antec seems to grind horribly on cold system start and stops after like 2 minutes and becomes absolutely silent afterwards. It's so weird and I'm worried buying other closed loops if they all do the same. I just happen to have a weird case config where i have radiator on the bottom of case intake and the pump is above on the CPU socket. Cools really well on very low RPM, but this cold start grinding is super annoying.
That cause all the bubbles are going in to the pump. Over time the problem will get worse.

I could care less for CLC anymore. Nothig but a headache. Plus if you want to get 280 rad, just pick up Swiftech H240-X instead.
Posted on Reply
#11
RejZoR
It wasn't doing that when it was brand new. And I've tried rotating the pump unit and it didn't change anything.
Posted on Reply
#12
Icewind31
RejZoRIt wasn't doing that when it was brand new. And I've tried rotating the pump unit and it didn't change anything.
Despite the claims, the coolant does evaporate very slowly over time, like what sp33d said, it only gets worse over time. So I'm kinda glad corsair puts thicker lines in, it helps reduce that.

Reason why they give you a max 5 year warranty, because after that, it'll degrade to a point where it'll significantly affect performance and even safety temp tolerances of cpu/gpu. Unlike a heatsink where you can tell if a fan is spinning, you can't tell how much fluid is left in the closed loops. (they probably assume you would have upgraded before that 5 year span)

Don't think you can fix the problem of the sound w/o location the radiator above pump. Have you tried that? If you hear sloshing even just testing it out radiator above pump... then definitely warranty case.
Posted on Reply
#13
Assimilator
Sp33d Junki3That cause all the bubbles are going in to the pump. Over time the problem will get worse.

I could care less for CLC anymore. Nothig but a headache. Plus if you want to get 280 rad, just pick up Swiftech H240-X instead.
Good luck running push/pull on an H240-X.
Posted on Reply
#14
Sp33d Junki3
AssimilatorGood luck running push/pull on an H240-X.
You know Push/Pull do very little in temps on a low FPI rads. Plus you can add a 3rd fan on the bottom for partial P/P.
Posted on Reply
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