

💧 Cool your rig, not your vibe — silent power that keeps you ahead.
The BXQINLENX SC600 is a compact, brushless DC water pump designed for PC CPU cooling systems, delivering a high flow rate of 132.09 GPH at just 10 watts of power. Featuring G1/4" standard fittings, a quiet ceramic bearing design, and a lifespan exceeding 50,000 hours, it offers efficient, low-noise cooling ideal for high-performance desktops and laptops. Perfect for millennial pros seeking reliable, energy-smart thermal management without breaking the bank.
| ASIN | B01GY7426A |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | #379 in Water Cooling Systems |
| Brand | BXQINLENX |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (163) |
| Date First Available | June 12, 2016 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Item Weight | 0.01 ounces |
| Item model number | SC600 |
| Manufacturer | BXQINLENX |
| Material | Polycarbonate |
| Maximum Flow Rate | 2.2 Gallons Per Minute |
| Maximum Lifting Height | 9.8 Feet |
| Part Number | SC600 |
| Power Source | DC Electric |
| Product Dimensions | 3.54"L x 2.36"W x 3.15"H |
| Sound Level | 50 Decibels |
| Style | Submersible |
| UPC | 606276004270 |
| Voltage | 12 Volts |
| Wattage | 10 watts |
R**H
Can't be beat for $23.99!
I installed this little pump 7 months ago (12hrs a day avg runtime) to cool an RTX 3080 through a 360mm radiator. I'm thoroughly impressed by how much water this pushes and how quiet it is; especially at this price. It's operating range seems to be 40%-100%, I run it at 50% as it's quieter than my case fans and still pushes plenty of water fast enough to cool my GPU (71f ambient room temp, core temp 57c under load at 50% pump speed, 100% will push it down to 53c). Considering other D5 and DDC pumps cost anywhere from 3x-6x as much, I can't believe how well this one works for the price and how quiet/reliable it's been. P.S. If you isolate this pump from your case with foam, it's nearly silent, even at 100% P.S.S. Find 'Fan Control' on Google (think it's hosted on GitHub) for a simple tool to control the pump speed (as long the header you plug the pump into on your motherboard supports variable voltage control) November 2024 Update: Still running this pump virtually 24/7 with no problems at all! What a great little pump.
R**3
Perfect for a budget water cooling system
I've been running this for almost a year now, nearly constantly, and it's been flawless. I run it at about 50% duty cycle to keep the noise down, but even at 100% it's not bad considering the cost and the volume of water it can move. It's not going to win any beauty contests, but it's absolutely functional, and at the end of the day that's what I care about more!
A**C
Works as advertised.. for the most part
I used this pump for a custom water cooling loop. It is really impressive for the price considering the D5 costs well over $70 plus a pump top and that has close to the same spec as this pump. I had to take it apart because it was making an awful sound. After reassembly it sounds normal. Its not the quietest pump but for $20 it gets the job done.
R**.
Far more powerful than a dedicated CPU pump!
I had my second CPU pump fail a couple of weeks ago. I was going to revamp my water cooling system anyway but wanted to wait a while. This forced my hand. I had this pump and parts on hand, so away I went! I was able to do the exact configuration I wanted, and the pump has plenty of power! I have it tuned to about 3000 rpm, and find my temps quite acceptable, but could dial it to 4200 if I needed more cooling. Even wide open, the pump is very quiet, barely detectable from the fans. I was going to run this with the existing pump as a booster but decided to "Frankenstein" the old pump, so it is now a free-flowing water block. Fortunately I kept the wiring, so my motherboard detects a cpu pump, which means I can use this new pump through a mechanically controlled fan control unit. This is my only criticism: I wish there was a way to put something on this pump that makes it detectable as the CPU pump. I will try later going through a fan header as others have suggested. So far I've only been going a week with this new config, but am very happy with what I see. I will update this review if necessary.
S**Y
One Powerful Pump!
I originally was using one pump for my computer cooling setup which consists of ~52' of 3/8" i.d. rubber tubing to/from a 3 row aluminum automotive racing radiator with 4 - 120 mm Noctua PPC fans. I live in the New Mexico desert and in the middle of the summer they still cool my 24 core running 50% phenomenally. I added the second pump on a separate electrical circuit with battery backup, as a backup pump. One winter the 25 mph wind froze an exposed line and pump with it still powered. 10 hours later after the pump and system thawed, they both continued rocking like nothing happened. I thought they would have burned out but that was over a year ago while running 24/7 at full throttle. Both of the pumps are outside my home but I can't hear them until within 2' of my ears. I just bought another one for a different project. I HIGHLY recommend these. Just please DO NOT submerse them! For some reason that's in the description but no, these are non-submersible. The value for the money of these little guys is top notch.
D**Z
Works but is NOISY
Works fine. Connection points seem to be robust. No leaks. Only issue is that the pump is LOUD. Like I can hear it over my TV in the same room kind of loud. It's not overwhelming by any stretch but it's enough that it drove me to buy an Alphacool pump/res for several times the price within a few days of use. YMMV
E**R
Pumps Water and is Quiet
I've gone through a number of pumps lately and having a pump go out on my work machine costs me sucks!. Sick of the price for computer parts I started searching in the place where pumps are king, Aquarium business! Aquarium people know way more about water pumping than computer guys. People, water pump technology is absolutely nothing new, it is not a new invention. These companies selling D5 pumps for $100+ are off their rockers! I've used to have an aquarium hobby and a water pump is a water pump is a water pump! I've never spent more than $20 for a pump until I started water cooling my computer 11 years ago. Which brings me to this awesome, regularly priced water pump. Pump, Reservoir, fittings and tubing under $100 and it is far quieter than the D5 it replaced, at full speed 4200 rpm I can hardly register it, at anything less than full speed it makes absolutely no noise. It is a strong pump, don't let the size fool you. If I must put one con; the wires are mustard and ketchup colored. I will be putting more of these pumps in my other work rigs! Notice in my picture I am using a 95,000 watt btu heat exchanger for my radiator, a furnace supply company out of ohio sells it here on Amazon for $120, all copper, six pass with dual manifolds. Under full CAD work load temperature is pinned at 46c . Doing anything else on my computer, games, blurays, photoshop, illustrator all at the same time, temps are pinned at 25c, during winter months my rig runs between 8-12c.
D**A
Cheap but don’t sleep
This pump has reliably cooled my 2080ti for a year now. On maintenance I accidentally over tightened my fitting and cracked the pump housing. I spent 0 time to purchase another as it really has been effortless to install and use. I had to 3d print my own mounting bracket, but it runs quietly and is adjustable with FanControl. I kept the first pump for spare parts. Has been a great pump for a first time loop.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
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