Under the banner of the Frostflow series are advanced all-in-one liquid cooling systems, in which the manufacturer sought to implement all its most interesting technical developments in order to satisfy even the most daring requests of gamers. Instead of simply updating the backlight or adding more processor mounts to the box, ID-COOLING engineers bothered with increasing the area of the radiator, strengthened the water block mount, used modified coolers with increased pressure, and also increased the power of the pump so that it did not have to work at maximum speed.


Unlike the more affordable Frostflow and Auraflow LSSs from the same manufacturer, the Dashflow series range is dominated by large-sized cooling systems, created with an eye on spacious cases and hot multi-core processors. For example, the conditional Dashflow 360 according to the passport is capable of removing up to 400 W of heat from the processor, and only the hottest models of Ryzen 9 and Core i9 processors can really strain it. Dashflow 360 can handle more modest processors with ease, giving them the ability to maintain stable auto-overclocking across all cores with virtually no throttling. At the same time, it will make noticeable noise, which will not suit all users. Still, the price category here is lower than that of elite life-support systems from Be Quiet and NZTX.

The series also includes medium-sized models a la Dashflow 240, equipped with a 240/280 mm radiator and a pair of active fans. Unlike the flagship Dashflow models, such a system is more suitable for cooling mid-class processors (Core i5/i7 or Ryzen 5/7) with slight overclocking. Thanks to the possibility of vertical installation, such a cooler can become the optimal solution for a compact PC, which simply does not fit into a large tower cooler.