“The SwordM integrated water cooling system proved easy to setup (most of the components come pre-installed) and will deliver acceptable results for cooling most modern CPUs. However, there are other water cooling systems available (including DIY) that will deliver higher performance. And if you are not ready for water cooling, the standard SwordM chassis offers excellent airflow for aggressive air cooling.”Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- Zalman GS1000 @ bit-tech
- Tagan A+ CS-Monolize Review @ OCC
- GELID Solutions GC-1 Thermal Compound Review @ OCIA
- Antec Three Hundred Gaming Case @ Tech-Reviews
- Apevia X-Supra Blue Special Edition @ techPowerUp
- Antec Three Hundred vs. Twelve Hundred Gaming Case @ Metku
- Raidmax Iceberg Case Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Extreme Overclocking with Liquid Nitrogen @ tkArena
- Thermalright IFX-14 CPU and Back-side Heatpipe Cooler Review @ Bigbruin
- OCZ Vendetta 2 Heatpipe Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
- Mounting a CPU Cooler? The Heatpipe Direction Might Matter @ Legit Reviews
- Exclusive double decker Xigmatek heatpipe heatsink @ Frostytech
- SilenX IXTREMA Heatsink Review @ High Tech Reviews
The power of the water sword
In Lee’s first review of the Thermaltake Sword he focused many of the features, such as the LCD panel as well as it’s air cooling abilities. In his second look he sets it up for watercooling, as Thermaltake claims to have designed the case with alternate cooling methods in mind, in fact most of the elements come pre-installed. See how easy it was for him to set up in the full review.