‘A short while ago I reviewed the Corsair Nautilus 500 external liquid cooling system. Corsair was also kind enough to send me their VGA and Chipset blocks to go with the Nautilus so that is what I have up on the review block today. We know from my review that the Nautilus is an excellent cooling solution for your CPU, but what happens when you want to cool your video card and your chipset along with the CPU all in the same loop? Well you’ll have to read on to see how the Nautilus performed under the pressure…’Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- ASUS: The EN7600 GS Silent, and EN7800 GT TOP Silent @ AnandTech
- Budget graphics cards compared @ The Tech Report
- Chaintech GeForce 7300 GS 256MB DDR2 @ Hardware Zone
- Additional members of the GeForce 7 family? @ NGOHQ
- Galaxy GeForce 7600 GS 256 GDDR3 @ HEXUS
- ASUS EN7600GT Silent (GeForce 7600 GT 256MB) @ Hardware Zone
- EVGA 7800GS KO SUPERCLOCKED w/ACS3 @ GamePyre
- NiBiTor v2.9 Released… @ MVKTech
- Asus Ageia PhysX card tested @ The Inquirer
- Asustek claims world’s first PhysX add-in card, but it’s probably #2 @ DigiTimes
Corsair teached their Nautilus new tricks
Think Computers has posted a dual review, both reivewing the new GPU/VGA waterblock from Corsair, and examining the effect of adding more components to an existing watercooling loop.