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From the silentpcreview article:
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GE - water cooling is definitely not for everyone. While your "radiator" will use fans - they are usually mounted in such a way as to make literally no perceptable noise. The reason I like liquid is because its safe, VERY effective and VERY quite. Plus there is no need to constantly be pulling and cleaning filters.
I think this is a case for th 12cm fans though. Thanks for the link - may use them in a rig or 2 in the future! |
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From what I gather getting a Wolfdale and not overclocking 20% is really a waste. Once, after running the system for ~ 2hrs, I switched off and removed the heatsink from the E8400, then carefully touched the CPU to check how much the processor had heated up. Nothing. At stock it can be cooled passively I guess.
Sure some people just dont want to mess with their computer, but from a technical standpoint it's safe. |
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Using safe to describe a situation where water is flowing inside a case full of electronic components is a little too much. :rotfl: Water cooling is good for extreme overclocking, but an excellent air cooled solution doesn't have the drawbacks of liquid cooling and can be as quite. Especially when you're using high quality fans at low rpms. I have 4 12cm fans in my computer and they are literally inaudible. |
Out of curiosity, do water cooled systems really work with water? I thought they would use non-conducting liquids by now??
Otherwise I'd stay the hell away from it! Because introducing the natural enemy of electronics (water) into your computer, is not a very good idea. Besides, as I said, the noise argument is a thing of the past with the current generation of 12cm fans. The only real advantage of watercooling is performance, but you only need that for extreme overclocking. |
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there was even a you tube video showing a guy running his whole system in an aquarium filled with vegtable oil, power supply and all. there are many non conductive oils out there that work but the very expensive pumps last longer when used with water (actually antifreeze mixture so it doesnt cause corrosion) because its easier to push water than oil due to the viscocity level. IMHO water cooling is only "needed" if your a serious overclocker and need something to control "excessive" heat. |
They dont use water - you use a non-conducting liquid - most are not only non-conductive and non-corrosive, but also biodegradable. They also tend to have much higher abilities to transfer heat than "pure" water. Water alone has a 25x higher ability to move heat than does air.
Guys, this is said with all due respect - ie I am not trying to be an A$$, but the attitude toward liquid cooling is a bit archaic. It did used to be a quirky and difficult thing. But that was years ago. Just like everything else, it has matured. The idea that liquid is only for overclockers isnt right either. Why do most PC components fail? HEAT! The fact is that in a "standard" gamers rig - someone who doesnt overclock but just builds a sweet machine to play on - liquid cooling will often cut temps anywhere from 25-50 percent. Sure liquid is great for overclocking - but for the guy running a high end system - its very good too. The drawbacks are its not as easy to install - takes patience and attention to detail. The positives - no monthly cleaning of filters and fans, just a once a year tank fill - along with components that LAST LONGER since they are kept COOLER. Liquid cooling is not for everyone and every application. But if your going to build a box for gaming - your well served to look at it as an option! A couple of helpful links: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...r-pc,1573.html www.xoxide.com |
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