Wednesday, February 11th 2009

Thermaltake Introduces ProWater880i - Maximized Power Liquid Cooling

Although liquid Cooling has excellent cooling performance, gamers still worry about it will take too much space in the chassis. Now, this problem can be solved by Thermaltake new liquid cooling system, ProWater880i.

ProWater880i is developed to solve the dilemma of good performance and space saving. With the special designed mounting kit, gamer can easily install ProWater880i in the back of the chassis. It brings two benefits. One is that the radiator can be cooled by the cold air outside and generate better cooling performance. The other benefit is the space allocation within the chassis can be optimized.
To achieve maximized performance, ProWater880i comes with many exciting features. First, it can support the latest and fastest Intel Core i7 processor with the included clip. The 24cm Motorsport Radiator can speed up the heat dissipation. Meanwhile, the two efficient 12cm fans generate maximum air flow. P500 pump and big capacity tank create perfect coolant circulation and cool down all the major components. The all-copper waterblock has been through industrial-grade sealed. Leakage problem won't happen to PW880i and users can just enjoy the high cooling performance brought by it.

With all these features, ProWater880 definitely is a state-of-the-art liquid cooling product. By owning ProWater880i, users can be brought a new whole generation. For more information, visit this page.
Source: Thermaltake
Add your own comment

27 Comments on Thermaltake Introduces ProWater880i - Maximized Power Liquid Cooling

#3
Haven
Compared to other thermaltake offerings, this actually looks decent.
Posted on Reply
#4
Sasqui
HavenCompared to other thermaltake offerings, this actually looks decent.
Probably seems decent, until you start using it.

Looks like a strap-on :wtf:
Posted on Reply
#5
KBD
yeah, Thermaltake's water cooling track record is not great to say the least. But still i'd like to give em a chance and wait for both user and pro reviews before passing judgment on this 880i. I do like the arrangement of the water-cooling setup though, looks like they took the Swiftech radbox approach and built on that.
Posted on Reply
#6
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
Probably still using 1/4" tubes, and look how thin that rad is, I think it might be the thinnest rad I've ever seen compared to the fans.
Posted on Reply
#7
KBD
newtekie1Probably still using 1/4" tubes
actually its 3/8" tubing, which is good but not as good as 1/2"
Posted on Reply
#8
Sasqui
KBDactually its 3/8" tubing, which is good but not as good as 1/2"
Yep and an aluminum radiator.
Posted on Reply
#9
DanishDevil
newtekie1Probably still using 1/4" tubes, and look how thin that rad is, I think it might be the thinnest rad I've ever seen compared to the fans.
HOLY HELL I didn't even realize that! It looks as thin as a pencil!
Posted on Reply
#10
Odin Eidolon
alu radiator. bleh. and remember the pump is one of the worst pumps ever.
Posted on Reply
#11
deaffob
space saving ... what? that thing is big
Posted on Reply
#12
EiSFX
lol the rad is thiner then the fans and the fans are even the thin versions
Posted on Reply
#13
DanishDevil
deaffobspace saving ... what? that thing is big
They probably say space-saving because it's mounted externally, so you save interior space.
Posted on Reply
#14
aspire
Another shit-tastic product with an Engrish filled press release, brought to you by Thermaltake, makers of rubbish water cooling since 2002.
Posted on Reply
#15
to6ko91
aspireAnother shit-tastic product with an Engrish filled press release, brought to you by Thermaltake, makers or rubbish water cooling since 2002.
:roll::toast:
Posted on Reply
#16
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
Odin Eidolonalu radiator. bleh. and remember the pump is one of the worst pumps ever.
That was their old pump, this one isn't actually that bad, it isn't that great either though.
Posted on Reply
#17
jinu
looks nice but awe man i hate metal corrosion, and seems to be almost like a swiftech bite off really. but wtf they still using alu parts?
Posted on Reply
#18
1Kurgan1
The Knife in your Back
jinulooks nice but awe man i hate metal corrosion, and seems to be almost like a swiftech bite off really. but wtf they still using alu parts?
Looks better than the current offerings, but that radiator looks about as thick as a dime...
Posted on Reply
#19
Exavier
my friend gave me his Tt pump...the only time you'd catch me using it was if you could get that guy from ages back on XS who made a custom top for it..
then maybe I'd use it.
Posted on Reply
#20
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
It would be so bad if they would just include a big chuck of zinc in the res. :)
Posted on Reply
#21
J-Man
It's always better to go custom :)
Posted on Reply
#24
AddSub
Thermaltake ProWater 850i and Thermaltake BigWater 760i were pretty disappointing. Both can be beaten by high end air based solutions. I hope ProWater 880i can do better than that.

Thermaltake used to be pretty big few years ago. Not the greatest quality products, but decent products that were always affordable and innovative.

Personally, I think high-end air coolers have gotten to the point where low-end or even mid-range liquid cooling solutions are pointless. Few years ago low to mid range liquid cooling kits made sense, but that was before HDT designs and before massive towering heatsinks with several industrial strength high-CFM fans become the standard. If somebody is itching to ditch air cooling then phase-change would be my recommendation for day-to-day operation or liquid nitrogen for those extreme benching sessions. Plain liquid cooling is on it's way out except for the top of the line high-end setups. And even those are making less sense every day since more "extreme" cooling solutions are getting cheaper and easier to handle.
Posted on Reply
#25
Bjorn_Of_Iceland
One is that the radiator can be cooled by the cold air outside and generate better cooling performance.
Indeed.. cool air from the PSU and Videocard(s)' exhaust -_-
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Dec 22nd, 2024 12:38 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts