While not the lowest temperatures we’ve ever seen, the Seidon 240v clocked a respectable +28c at full load on stock clocks, putting it on par with the Deepcool Captain 240 EX, and only slightly warmer than most other water coolers, such as those from Corsair and NZXT.
Pushing the clocks up, the Seidon really came into its element and handled its self better than we expected, moving down the chart and only running at +38c, putting it into the same region as other high-performance water coolers, albeit not performing quite as well, but only by 1-2c warmer than rival hardware.
It’s here that we see exactly why the Seidon isn’t the coolest because it’s clearly designed to be the quietest. Only the Corsair H100i V2 and H80i V2 recorded fan noise as low as this and 37 dBa is pretty darn impressive.
Once again, the Seidon 240v impresses with extremely low noise for an AIO liquid cooler, and while we could hear some mechanical pump noise from the block, this was only at close range on an open-air test bench. Overall, this is a very impressive cooler.
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