The Seidon 120M’s packaging follows Cooler Master’s traditional style. An image of the waterblock is shown on the box’s front side, as well as some of the cooler’s key points.
Detailed attributes are outlined on the rear of the box, alongside annotated drawings showing specific dimensions of the Seidon 120M’s components.
Cooler Master supplies a thorough bundle consisting of; installation hardware, an extra set of screws for dual fan operation, a manual and warranty guide, and a small tube of thermal paste.
We are pleased to see the tube of thermal paste as it allows users to install and remove the waterblock on numerous occasions; many of Corsair’s models will require a tube of thermal paste to be purchased. Hopefully this is the case with retail versions of the Seidon 120M.












January 30, 2013
#1
Super review Luke. I have to order one of these, what a great deal IMO
January 30, 2013
#2
This is an excellent cooler, the all in ones are hard to beat now. I had a D14 for a while and loved it, but it was so hard to get at anything inside the case it blocked half the motherboard !
February 1, 2013
#3
I recentl got a Seidon 120M and it seems to work very nicely. I did add a C/M Turbo Master Mach 1.8 fan on the case side, which didn’t seem to add any perceptible noise. The one change that I would really like would be the ability to raise the water pump speed. With the two fans it seems that increasing the WP volume would be an excellent option. I’ve got a mildly overclocked i7 – 930 and when running a WSE scan, for instance, hte core temp can still rise to as high as 175 F, so a bit more water flow would be nice. I ahve it in a HAF 922 case and there is plenty of room. I’m about to add a 200mm side fan as well as the original rear case fan at the bottom of the case, and things still won’t be crowded
April 11, 2013
#4
Did you happen to try installing the fan with an exhaust setup? How much difference would you think the performance/results change?