Phanteks' first RL AIO kit is the Glacier One and comes in 240, 280 and 360mm long formats
Source: Geeknetic added 21st Dec 2020
by Pablo López Make 15 minutes …
Phanteks has announced its first RL AIO kit , the Glacier One, of which no less than 4 versions will arrive from 240 up to 280 mm in length.
Today’s RL AIO kits are characterized by ARGB lighting, and Phanteks will be no exception with the debut of its first liquid cooling. The Phanteks Glacier One arrives with ARGB lighting on the CPU block , while the white version of 240 mm will incorporate fans with lights as well, so there will be no lack of effects. The 3 varieties in which they will be available are 240, 280 and 280 mm in length, being able to choose between black and white for the model of 240 mm and the rest only in black, with normal fans without illumination. As there is no version of 120 mm cannot be incorporated into recently released manufacturer boxes such as the Evolv Shift 2.
The integrated water pump is manufactured in conjunction with Asetek to give a certain prestige to the RL AIO kit. The CPU block maintains a infinity effect thanks to lighting. The radiator is made of 27 mm of thickness in any of the 4 cases.
Until 360 mm with the Phanteks Glacier One to drain the processor and forget about high temperatures
The fans of 14 cm of the Phanteks Glacier One rotate between 500 and 2200 RPM (up to 2000 RPM for 14 cm), generating a maximum flow of 60. 51 CFM (93. 05 for 14 cm) and high pressure e 3. 41 mmH2O (3. 59 for 14 cm). They should go on sale this same month of December, according to the manufacturer.
The prices are as follows, also putting the fans themselves on sale separately:
- Glacier One 240 MP (Black): € 124. 60
- Glacier One 280 MPH (White): € 169 . 90
- Glacier One 280 MP: € 139. 60
- Glacier One 500 MP: € 169. 90
- 120 MP PWM Fan : € 14. 90
- 140 MP PWM Fan: € 20. 93
End of Article. Tell us something in the Comments or come to our Forum!
Pablo López
With 15 years I started to overclock my PC to tapping every extra FPS he could in gaming and scratching a few milliseconds in SuperPi, while relentlessly posting about hardware on the Geeknetic forum as a user and reader. They were probably so fed up with continually reading me on the forum that I became part of the writing team, where I continue to report on the latest in technology. Astrophysics and PC games are the hobbies that, after hardware, cover most of my free time.