Phanteks Glacier C350i CPU Water Block Review 0

Phanteks Glacier C350i CPU Water Block Review

Closer Examination »

Packaging and Accessories


Phanteks sent this along with another Glacier series product we will look at later, and so we begin with the product packaging directly even though they operate a web shop. As with their GPU block, first impressions are excellent with a premium unboxing experience awaiting the customer. A primarily black two-piece packaging with a hint of blue and two seals in the middle to keep the pieces together is used here. The Phanteks logo is everywhere, and more subtle is the Glacier series mention on the front, which is in turn accompanied by a sticker with the product name. There is another label on the side that lets you know the full product name, which identifies whether you have the satin black or mirror chrome finish on the side covers. Tearing the seals apart, we can see the CPU block displayed front and center, and there is a thin foam sheet on the inside of the top piece to protect the block.


The block is held in place inside a thicker foam piece that is on a cardboard cutout, and the foam is cut to match the mounting bracket and locking nuts/adapters on each corner for a snug, protective fit. Everything else is hidden from sight, and Phanteks has done this on purpose so that the first thing you see is what you paid for most. Underneath lie the accessories, and there are many here. Included are a well-written, detailed manual (online copy here) and a tube of Phanteks PH-NDC thermal compound, its rated thermal conductivity 4.5 W/mK and gravity 2.55 g/cm^3. Phanteks claims a nanodiamond-like composition. I have no plans to test this given I use a reference thermal paste, but the tube has enough in it for multiple applications across your entire system.


The other accessories all come in plastic ziplock pouches. Phanteks includes a backplate for those platforms needing it; LGA 115x, for example. The backplate is made out of sturdy metal in a semi-glossy black finish and has rubber foam pads on the contacting side to prevent any electrical shorting of the motherboard. There are cutouts to accommodate the socket ILM screws jutting out on the back of the PCB, and also a set of three holes per corner marked 1/2/3 with a legend in the middle to signify which socket each of these hole sets corresponds to, which will be needed during installation. There is a set of four socket screws for Intel LGA 2011, which also work for LGA 2011-3 and LGA 2066, in a labeled pouch with an M4-threaded section on one end that will screw into the motherboard's cooler-mounting holes. The other set of mounting hardware is for the other Intel sockets, and here, we see a set of four different socket screws as well as black plastic studs.


The final accessories are cables that aid in lighting the block, and here, we get an RGB LED cable for the block, an RGB cable adapter to use with a case/motherboard, and an RGB Y-splitter if you have more than one such product compatible with the cables. These allow for neater cable management, and Phanteks would of course prefer a pairing with their own Glacier CPU and GPU blocks.
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Jul 23rd, 2024 05:27 EDT change timezone

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