be quiet!'s Shadow Rock 2 comes in a box measuring roughly 14.5 cm in length, 17 cm in width, and 19 cm in height. The front has an image of the cooler along with its rated TDP of 180 watts. The left side has a paragraph describing the product and its features in French, Spanish, and Polish. The back details the CPU cooler's specifications along with a few features. A small paragraph talking about be quiet! is also located on the back.
The right side of the box has the same paragraph on the left side, but in English and German. It describes be quiet!'s desire to offer the quietest possible operation with "product conception, design, and quality control in Germany." The top of the box simply has the cooler's name and its TDP.
Contents
The box, once opened, showed everything to be packed away neatly and securely. The mounting hardware and all accessories are sealed into a small plastic bag that is held in place with cardboard. After removing the mounting hardware, the instructions can be found on top of a piece of black cardboard underneath of which is the cooler itself. The CPU cooler below is sitting on a piece of foam that cradles the base of the heatsink. The fan is pre-attached to the cooler.
be quiet!'s Shadow Rock 2 comes with everything one will need to install it on any modern socket. The heatsink and fan are of course the mainstay—there is no product without them, so those parts are definitely necessary. The backplate is a universal design and is, while bulky, very sturdy; it won't flex or bend. The fan clips are straight forward: They are not special but do the job well, holding the fan to the heatsink tightly. A small tube of thermal grease is included as well. be quiet! uses two sets of brackets, one for Intel and the other for AMD. Long screws for the backplate are included along with the plastic clips to hold them in place. Hardware for mounting to Intel's LGA 2011 socket has also been included, along with a spanner I hate with a passion. Trying to get in there to tighten nuts on any cooler with these small tools is a nightmare, but users on mainstream sockets won't run into that problem.