Corsair H75 review -
Product Showcase
So here is the phase where we slowly start assembling a test setup. First we mount the fans towards the radiator, four screws per fan and it's in place. Basically you want to mount the fans inwards and have the push the (exhaust) the hot air at the top of your PC.
Typically you push the screws through your chassis, then the fans and then secure it all on the radiator. We test externally hence we mount the fan directly to the radiator. In the early stages you need to decide where you'll be positioning your radiator and how the tubing and wiring will be managed. The two fans have connectors you can merge them together with a splitter cable that is included and leads towards the cooling block. Once done you need to decide where you'll be positioning your radiator and how the tubing and wiring will be managed. The fan has connectors you can connect towards your motherboard fan header.
Let me show you that a little more in-depth. The pump you connect to an optional fan header and the FANs towards the CPU FAN header, that way you can regulate RPM in the BIOS. We recommend you to have the motherboard BIOS set at normal instead of quiet as these fans hardly can be heard under normal operation.
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Corsair HS65 Wireless Headset review
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Corsair H170i Elite Capellix XT review
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Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5 6000 CL36 review
In July, Corsair presented a new series of DDR5 memories: the Vengeance RGB DDR5. The available kits from the RGB edition have a frequency higher than the base 4800 MHz (5200-6600 MHz); the non-RGB version starts from 4800 MHz. We are checking the Corsair Vengeance RGB 6000 MHz CL36 DDR5 kit today. It's in the middle frequency in the series. We already had an opportunity (almost three years ago) to review the Vengeance (Pro) RGB series RAM, but it was for the DDR4; the frequency was 3200 MHz, and it received a "Top Pick" award, and also the Vengeance RGB Pro SL which had 3600 MHz frequency (with CL18) and got the "Approved" award. But let's focus back on the tested DDR5 kit.