From the article posted on xtremeresources.com:
Basicly, this is a water-cooling system that has a Peltier plate between the water block and the CPU.
The cost is said to be around $170, according to theinquirer.net, who had the link to the review.
Read through the review. They take a Pentium 4 LGA775 530 (Prescott), and run it at 3.0GHz. At full load, it was cruising at 17C. They pumped the CPU up to 4.2GHz, and it was running at 39C under load.
http://www.xtremeresources.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Reviews&file=index&req=showcontent&id=62Water cooling was unknown to the majority of computer users a few years ago. Within a single year, it went from a hardcore enthusiast o_nly cooling method to the mainstream market with many companies releasing some kind of a liquid cooling kit. There are hundreds of those kits around now, ranging from basic water cooling kits that can barely maintain a decent temperature to well-designed water cooling kits that can maintain operating temperatures near the environment temperature with ease. However all of them have the same problem; their cooling capability is limited by the laws of nature, where not a single o_ne of them can lower the temperatures below the temperature surrounding the radiator. Swiftech, o_ne of the oldest and most reputable cooling products manufacturers in the US, offers the enthusiast something different, stronger than the rest, able to lower the temperatures of your CPU way below ambient temperatures, the H20-120T Thermoelectric Series Liquid Cooling kit.
Basicly, this is a water-cooling system that has a Peltier plate between the water block and the CPU.
The cost is said to be around $170, according to theinquirer.net, who had the link to the review.
Read through the review. They take a Pentium 4 LGA775 530 (Prescott), and run it at 3.0GHz. At full load, it was cruising at 17C. They pumped the CPU up to 4.2GHz, and it was running at 39C under load.