
At the surface, all of this can look like a “sticker operation,” by which I mean it may look as if manufacturers put their “sticker” (logo) on a cooler and then sell it – but most folks do more than that when designing their variant of a product.

Even the CLC OEMs will source some of their components from the outside, like radiators.įirst, a simple table to reveal suppliers of known liquid coolers in the industry, then we'll talk about how companies differentiate themselves.
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In this case, that customization includes software integration and variable pump speed control, alongside an RGB LED in the pump's faceplate.

NZXT, for instance, sells the NZXT X41 liquid cooler, a product sourced from Asetek but customized by NZXT. These companies buy the pump, radiator, tubing, and liquid in an AIO (all-in-one) package from suppliers who specialize in the making of such items the brands we know then provide varying degrees of product input to differentiate amongst themselves. This topic came about following some readers stating that they'd never seen an “Asetek” or “CoolIT” cooler on sale before.Ĭorsair, NZXT, SilverStone, Enermax, Fractal, and others sell liquid cooling products. Liquid coolers are the easiest example and the one about which we are talking today.

In most industries – automotive, technology & computing, bike components – suppliers build a base product, receive input from a manufacturer, and then produce a slightly modified version of their core offering. The recent banishment from US markets of Cooler Master's closed-loop liquid coolers has inspired us to research and document major CLC suppliers.
