THE BIGWATER 760 PLUS
The 9.5mm water tubings are UV sensitive/reactive and so is the provided Coolant so if your tower has a side window it will certainly look great.
Hard plastic is not what I’d use to cover a waterblock but we can't have it all i guess.
The nickel plated copper base features a mirror like finish and is even from side to side as you can see from the above picture.
The dual 5.25" bay BigWater 760 Plus measures 232mm in length, 148.6mm in width and 85mm in height while weighing a total of 1.25kg (coolant not included).
As you can see the fascia of the BigWater 760 Plus is black in color and without many bells and whistles.
Taking a closer look we see the perforated section from which cool air gets to the inside fan, the normal/refill coolant status LEDs, the fan speed control knob (manual) and the product name.
The BigWater 760 Plus comes with the same mounting holes as would two optical drives.
The 120mm 2400RPM fan features blue LEDs which will partially illuminate the UV reactive water coolant and the tubings.
The 12v ceramic bearing pump used by Thermaltake features a life cycle of 80.000 hours and is capable of pushing up to 500L per hour with just 16dBA of noise. Both the pump and the 120mm fan are powered from a single 3pin mainboard connector (at first even i didn't think it would be enough).
Moving at the far end of the unit we see the 130cc liquid tank which also has two tags on it for low and high coolant levels.
The aluminum radiator of the BigWater 760 Plus measures 153mm in length, 120mm in width and 28mm in height.
The density of the fins is medium-high which explains why Thermaltake is using a high RPM fan.
Even if you cut the provided water cooling tubing in two it's still too long so you need to carefully measure how much it is you want from the unit to the CPU and back.