Cooler Master Seidon 120M review

Can this budget liquid chiller compete with the big boys?

Cooler Master Seidon 120M
Cooler Master Seidon 120M

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Good performance

  • +

    Removes need for low-profile RAM

  • +

    Price

Cons

  • -

    Peak-to-idle time not very fast

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There once was a time when the idea of water-cooling was seen as about as outlandish as the way we currently look at people jamming liquid nitrogen into their systems for overclocking challenges. Water-cooling also used to be rather tricksy and damned expensive to boot, but not so any more.

Adding to the glut of closed-loop liquid CPU coolers is Cooler Master's latest series, the Seidon. This Seidon 120M version is the single-fan setup using one 120mm fan with a radiator of the same size, much like the pricier Thermaltake Water 2.0 Performer.

Benchmarks

Stock cooling performance
Full CPU load: Degrees centigrade: Lower is better

CM SEIDON 120M: 58
CORSAIR H100: 60

Stock cooling performance
Peak to idle: Seconds: Quicker is better

CM SEIDON 120M: 177
CORSAIR H100: 41

Overclocked performance
Full CPU load: Degrees centigrade: Lower is better

CM SEIDON 120M: 88
CORSAIR H100: 87

Quietly cool

With the larger area Corsair's H100 is a more effective cooler, but that doubled radiator only manages to chill things by an extra couple of degrees at best. In fact, at stock CPU speeds, Cooler Master's latest manages to stay a little cooler under load.

Though it has to be said our test H100 has taken a fair bit of punishment over the years. When we ran our 3770K at 4.6GHz the larger liquid cooler showed a bit of an edge at the high end, but still the Seidon 120M ably kept the Corsair cooler in its sights.

Where the larger radiator of the H100 comes into its own is in the time it takes to get the chip from its peak temperature back down to the idle temperatures. At stock speeds the H100 does this in over 40 seconds while the Seidon takes under three minutes whether the chip is at stock speeds or overclocked.

The higher performance of the cooler with the larger radiator was expected, and we also expect the Seidon 240M to be incoming very soon. But for less than £50 the performance of the smaller 120M is impressive and will keep your overclocked chips running happily.