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liquid cooling tips
Any tips? What are some good sites for liquid (water) cooling?
I have a mid-tower so I was looking for a reservoir/pump and controller combo for one or two 5.25" bays with a separate radiator I can mount on a fan port. Do any come to mind? Also, what do you use to close up unneeded fan ports? |
whatever you find out here, be sure to check out hardocp.com 's forums. They have lots of expertise in liquid cooling.
I personally won't do it. A Thermaltake Armor case (especially with the 25cm side fan option) has more than enough airflow to cool even the most powerful desktop, and no risk of leaking coolant. |
Yeah it's fun and everything but Shakran is right. Air cooling cools just as good as liquid cooling nowadays. Ever since the dawn of Thermaltake and all of those crazy fuckers with their metal fins and shit and vacuum-cleaner-loud fans, air cooling has been more than sufficient.
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I can't see it being worthwhile for the hassle and risk unless you want to do it simply as a mechanical challenge (similar to most PC modding/overclocking/tweaking)..
Good aircooling fans and cases should be mostly sufficient. |
If you want to do some extreme overclocking then I can understand but like others have said, air cooling is just fine. I have this, it has two 120mm fans and it nearly silent.
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I have a water cooled case setting in my closet. After two fried boards from water leaks it has found a good resting place. Good luck just check your connections every now and again for leaks.
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so even though the fluid is non-conductive is still can easily fry your PC?
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I water cooled for a long time... was good for wow factor showing off to other nerds... but really it was just a pain in the butt and an extra worry associated with the computer.... not too mention it made an already heavy case really heavy!
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huh, try xtremesystems and check out the mods on there ... rad is all I can say.
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Liquid helium or bust!
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My overclocked system has been running with watercooling for over a year. I use a T-line, didn't bother with a reservoir. I check the water level once every 6 months or so, and top it off.
I've been WCing since around 2001. I guess you could say I'm an old hand at this hobby. |
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I don't care what the box says, if it's water-based, it will short your shit out. Once water comes in contact with metal, ions form. Pure water will not short it out; pure water poured into a radiator will.
Oiled based will not short, but oil doesn't move heat anywhere close to how water does. I'll add that if you are overclocking, air cooling, no matter what you buy, will not compare to water cooling. Can you get by with air? Yes, with a loud system. With water you can spread the heat over a large surface area and keep the volume down while keeping the overall cfm up. |
Right but if you're doing mild to medium overclocking, a Tuniq Tower 120 or something similar will keep the temperatures fine without being at 150 decibels.
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I've never felt the need to do setup a LC system... I've seen some awfully neat ones but they always require a lot of extra work for very little real gain in cooling performance.
Why are you doing it? For effect or because air cooled isn't cutting it? http://blakespace.com/imgs/signature_tilted.jpg |
I dunno what y'all are talking about with a loud system. I can barely hear mine, and the cpu core temp and gpu core temp rise about 5 degrees from idle when I run an intensive game. It's all in getting the right equipment.
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I run a Q6600 at 3.6GHz. It's from when the Q series was fairly new and not the 4GHz beasts you find sometimes now. I refuse to accept 60C for any CPU at full load, and I had to design a system that could run 8 instances of folding @ home 24/7, with minimal noise and exceptional cooling. That means cooling the PWMs that are over 100C as well. Crucial DDR2 got hot as shit and burned out if you didn't treat it right, the raptor drive needed to remain cool (passive preferable) and the 8800GT had to remain cool as well so I could game while the system was under full load.
This is over 400 watts continuous pull. Oh and I wanted it all in a midtower. Small by today's gaming systems, but still a challenge. 3 main fans keep everything cool. I made it more efficient by adding ducting to force air to be pulled over the RAM and northbridge. I also added the mesh to the front 5.25 bays to allow outside air directly to the radiator. That decreased the temps by 10C, no kidding. So if you have a system that's quiet with some simple fans and a heatsink, then you obviously aren't pushing the system to its limits. When I talk about overclocking, I'm talking about near death experiences, not a 400MHz increase. |
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