Elevate Your PC Setup with Thermaltake's Latest Airflow Marvels: Robust 120Mm & 140Mm Reversible Fans, Now Enhanced With Stronger Magnets and a Clean Design Without RGB
Experience the Power of Hyte’s Nexus Link: The Ultimate AIO Cooler with a Large Display and Magnetic Connections
Last year, Corsair rolled out itsiCue Link lineup, which simplifies the PC building process by integrating cooling and lighting connections into a single, daisy-chainable cable, letting you connect and control your AIO cooler, RGB fans, and other components via a single cable plugged into hub.
At the same time, upstart case, cooling, and peripheral rival, Hyte, was working on a very similar concept that it callsNexus Link . Similar to iCue Link, Hyte’s offering has fans that snap together magnetically, a proprietary connector for daisy chaining, as well as RGB strips that come in multiple lengths, to really give your setup that gamer glow.
Nexus Link also integrates an AIO cooler, the impressiveThicc Q60 , which will soon be making its way to ourbest coolers list. But for Hyte’s system, the cooler, with its 5-inch screen and 64-bit Arm processor, is also effectively the hub or the brain of the ecosystem, alongside the company’s Nexus software.
As I did with Corsair’s iCue Link, I wanted to build a PC around Hyte’s Nexus link to get a sense of how easy and intuitive it is, as well as any unique features it brings to the PC building table (aka my testbench).
Overall, I found the Nexus Link build process to be fairly straightforward (barring some motherboard issues unrelated to Hyte, which I’ll touch on), though it is slightly more complicated than Corsair’s competing tech. All of the hardware and connectors feel solid, slick, and smartly designed (an impressive feat for a company that obviously has fewer resources than Corsair). And there’s no question that Hyte’s fans and AIO are better performers and, frankly, just more interesting than what Corsair offers with iCue Link. Nexus Link also feels more flashy (literally), with RGB stip accessories and a cooler with a big screen.
But Hyte’s thick fans and, well, Thicc cooler, mean they won’t fit in nearly as many of thebest PC cases as Corsair’s more standard offerings. And while, yes, Corsair’s iCue Link products are pricey, Hyte has the same issue. Its Thicc Q60 AIO, while it did outperform nearly every 360mm cooler we’ve tested in recent years, costs $299. So whether you opt for Nexus Link or iCue Link, you’re going to be paying a hefty premium for simplifying the build process. That means most people are likely going to stick with more traditional (and much cheaper) cooling products and just live with having to connect a lot more cables. Perhaps that’s not so bad now that you can also build a PC thatmakes it easy to hide those unsightly wires .
Nexus Link Pricing
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US MSRP
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Thicc Q60
$299.99
AIO Cooler, 3x 120mm fans
THICC FP12 (three-pack)
$79.99 ($109.99 with NP50 hub)
3x 120mm fans
LS30 qRGB Light Strips
$44.99 (74.99 with NP50 hub)
2x 1-meter magnetic RGB strips
LS 10 qRGB Light Strips
$39.99 (69.99 with NP50 hub)
3x 330mm magnetic RGB strips
Today’s best HYTE Y70 Touch and Hyte THICC Q60 240mm AIO deals
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The current Nexus Link lineup is technically made up of seven products, although three of them are the same, just with or without the NP50 hub. You can use the NP50 to connect Nexus Link fans and RGB strips to your system, with or without the $299 Q60 AIO cooler.
These are undoubtedly expensive accessories compared to traditional fans, AIOs, and light strips. But three of Corsair’s iCue Link fans cost between $99 and $139 (with a hub, depending on the model). Note, though, that Corsair’s fans integrate RGB lighting, while Hytes’ fans do not.
Hyte’s Thicc Q60 is also very expensive at $300. But Corsair’s competing 360mm iCue Link H150i costs over $200 with no screen, or $255-$275 for the LCD model with a small 2.1-inch screen. Keep in mind that our testing shows the240mm Hyte Cooler outperforms or ties the 360mm Corsair cooler in all metrics (while being quieter). But you will have to pay a bit more for that performance, plus the larger screen of the Q60. We’d love to see Hyte release a Q60 without the screen at a substantially lower price.
If you’re building a Nexus Link system, it’s at least somewhat likely that you’ll also need to buy a new case. I used the Hyte Y70 (essentially theY70 Touch , without the front screen) for this build. But because the Q60 cooler and its fans are so thick, your case options are limited, depending on how you want to mount it. The company lists just five cases that support top-mounting the cooler: Corsair’s 7000D, 7000X, and the Obsidian 1000D; Lian Li’s PC-O11 Dynmaic, and Phanteks Enthoo Elite. For front or side mounting, a much larger list of 60 current cases are supported. But several cases don’t support the cooler, including models from Asus, Be Quiet,Cooler Master , Lian Li, NZXT,Thermaltake , and others. For the full list, which the company says it is still updating, you can check out the Hyte Q60 manual, which is linked at the bottom of itsproduct page .
Title: Elevate Your PC Setup with Thermaltake's Latest Airflow Marvels: Robust 120Mm & 140Mm Reversible Fans, Now Enhanced With Stronger Magnets and a Clean Design Without RGB
Elevate Your PC Setup with Thermaltake's Latest Airflow Marvels: Robust 120Mm & 140Mm Reversible Fans, Now Enhanced With Stronger Magnets and a Clean Design Without RGB