Phanteks Enthoo EVOLV ITX: Watercooling Edition

Phanteks EVOLV ITX Phanteks EVOLV ITX

Final Thoughts
The Enthoo Evolv ITX is a small case. There is no way around that no matter how clever you are. However there does seem to be some things you can do as a case builder to make things much easier on your end user. And in this case that would be me. While I did feel that it was a bit tricky to get everything to fit together well, the case lent itself wonderfully to making my job much easier. My favorite part being the removeable radiator bracket. Having screws instead of rivets helped out a lot as well. I installed a full loop with a pretty massively thick radiator without have to make so much as one extra hole in the case. My only regret is not being able to install a second radiator in the front of the case. But that is simply because mine were too thick and is not a fault of Phanteks in the slightest.

If you want to build a watercooled mini ITX case, I strongly suggest the Enthoo Evolv ITX. As such I stand by our original review score of 10/10!

9 comments
  1. Thanks Derrick for this extension article of this unique little chassis from Phanteks; but I’m left wondering how the temps compare (air vs water), obviously the CPU temps would be better than air, but what of the temps inside the chassis?

    Also; were you able to install a drain line into the system; while the best scenario would be to have one off the pump, the only other choice would be off the top-side of the EKWB reservoir.

    I too know how difficult it is trying to fit (2) thick radiators into a smaller form factor chassis, as I tried (in vain) to fit RX 240 + an XTX 240 rads into a Corsair Air 540.

    Again thanks for the journey.

  2. Thanks for reading Brechan and thanks for the comments!

    I had thought about doing some temperature monitoring but concluded that the data would be almost irrelevant to other users. I suppose it would be somewhat useful to have a general idea of the temps to expect but unless your configuration was nearly identical to my own, the results could vary wildly. I will however work on getting you some internal readings of the watercooled version shortly.

    I did not install a drain line simply because I usually don’t. If I had wanted to, I could have easily put one on the line out of the pump going into the rad.

    I wholeheartedly agree about big rads in little cases; kinda just not meant to be. I might do some additional modding to make it work for me, but the obvious choice would be to simply get some thinner rads.

    I do have to say in spite of the difficulties that I had, this was really no harder to install in than a full size chassis, I am very fond this case!

  3. Well then, I guess this will be an exercise in patience since my parts are all showing up today and I have no case to put them in. Looks like it will be worth the wait though.

  4. Jirv311, I am in same the same boat. I have just received all of my water-cooling parts in preparations for this case. My current case will not fit it all without substantial modding to the case.

  5. Brechan here are some temperature readings I took with a standard infrared thermometer:
    Idle
    Exhaust – 32.22°C
    Internal – 36.1° C

    Load (Valley Benchmark)
    Exhaust – 35.56°C
    Internal – 44.4°C
    CPU(avg.) @ 4.2ghz – 58°C
    GPU(avg.) – 83.5°C

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