Mar 1, 2011 12:17 GMT  ·  By

With CeBIT now underway, companies from around the world are, basically, coming out in force, unveiling various things for different markets, like Corsair just revealed that a certain cooler would soon start selling.

As end-users may know, the CeBIT 2011 trade show, taking place in Hannover, Germany, has already started, meaning that various companies are showing off their pieces of hardware.

Corsair, for one has already delivered, or at least exposed, the Blue Vengeance series of DDR3 memory products for enthusiast-grade systems.

Now, the same company has let it be known that Deepcool is not the only outfit to have made a move on the cooling solutions segment.

What Corsair did was announce that a certain cooling solution unveiled some time ago has finally reached the point where it can begin selling.

The device in question is known as Hydro Series H60 and, unlike Deepcool's beast, uses liquid cooling instead of air, as the name implies in fact.

It works with Intel LHA 1366, 1155, 1156 and 775 CPUs, as well as AM2 and AM3 processors form Advanced Micro Devices.

As for what it is made of, there is a copper coldplate, a split-flow manifold that directly delivers coolant to it and a 120mm radiator.

"Corsair brought reliable, easy-to-install liquid CPU cooling systems to the masses with the groundbreaking Hydro Series H50," said Ruben Mookerjee, VP and General Manager for Components at Corsair.

"With the new H60, Corsair provides a new level of performance, ease of installation, and affordability."

Enthusiasts will be bale to get a hold of one of these H60 cooler once they start shipping over the enxt few days, for the price of $79.