First time water cool

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14 Nov 2003
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367
Hi all

I have been building my own enthusiast systems for a few years now and always steered clear of water cooling

now I am looking to build a new system and I want to do a bit of overclocking as usual but I want a quiet system

I am curious to know if using liquid will help me deal with the higher temps while keeping the noise down

so the question is can water cooling be quieter than air cooling for an oc system

NEv
 
Hi,

From my experience it can keep your computer quieter. I guess it depends what your looking at cooling.
I had an ultra extreme heatsink with 1200rpm fan on my i7 @ 4.0ghz with a gtx 260 with stock fan. The cpu fan was quiet and the gpu fan never went over 40% so that was quiet too. This was housed in a p182 case designed for quiet. So overall it was a very quiet system.
Then i bought a gtx 480. That made my quiet system very loud. So i used this as an excuse to buy a new case and watercool. Now my system is quiet again as i dont have a loud graphics card fan to listen too.
However, even though the fans can be set slower than 1200rpm, there are five total so i would guess the overall db level is around the same as the 1 cpu fan @ 1200rpm and gpu at 40%. So im thinking if i didnt have a loud gtx 480 and started watercooling when i had the gtx 260 then the watercooling wouldnt have been any quieter.

Phil.

One thing i do like to do is turn off all the fans and turn the pump to setting 1 when watching a film or web browsing. I cannot get away with gaming as the temps quickly get to high. But when watching a movie i can have acceptable temps with only the noise of a barely audible psu.
 
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I think that there needs to be a differentiation made when we talk about water cooling. There are two kinds of water cooling - the pre-built kits and the 'other kind'.

The kits do a very good job for what they are designed to do. I am not a fan but then I do not have the latest offerings to compare and comment on. Oh and I am not too trusting of some of the review sites and what they publish. So I tend to keep an open mind. The upside of these kits is that they cost quite a bit less than building your own personalised water cooling set up. That is the other kind :D

Once you step over to the wet side, there are heaps of options and decisions to be made. The first one is the most obvious but the one that is least made.

What is the work I want my WC to do?

Does it need to cool a seriously overclocked system for peformance gaming or crunching?
Does it need to be whisper silent for a HTPC set up in a TV room?
Does it need to bling so that my mates will go oooh and aaah?

There are many questions that could be added to the list of what work must my WC system do. :D

Now only once you have clearly identified what it is you want to do with the WC then you can proceed. So lets say you want a silent system because you share a room at Uni but you also like to game and therefore a bit of overclocking will be happening on the system that will be cooled.

The order of working stuff out is normally like this.
How much noise will be acceptable?
How much heat does my WC system need to manage?
The art is getting those two balance.

Oh yeah and how much is it going to cost me. WC is not cheap as a rule. And if you do start cheap you end up spending heaps more because the stuff you buy cheap does not have much longevity with the changes in hardware. So think hard about what you want to do.

Enjoy
 
i believe there are some air coolers which will outdo water cooling

There is no air cooler that will beat a custom water loop.

I run my fans on my sr1-420 rad at 600rpm, they are inaudible and keep my cpu at 4ghz at 56-58 degrees under full load (prime95). There is no air cooler that can give temperatures like that whilst being practically silent. The custom loop will cost a lot more though.
 
There is no air cooler that will beat a custom water loop.

I run my fans on my sr1-420 rad at 600rpm, they are inaudible and keep my cpu at 4ghz at 56-58 degrees under full load (prime95). There is no air cooler that can give temperatures like that whilst being practically silent. The custom loop will cost a lot more though.


Well said mate - nice rad you have there.
 
Yes it's much quieter I have 3x 1300rpm fans on my radiator and temps are great (i7 4ghz/480gtx), I'd probably need a screaming 5000rpm delta fan with several case fans to get anywhere near this on air and plus I'd have a loud and hot stock 480gtx.
 
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There is a big difference my Athlon II X4 @ 3.6 Unlocked Cache maxes out @ 50'c folding. On my previous titan fenrir I would see temps of 60+ and it would be noisey as hell, but with my water loop I've got my fans ~ 700rpm
 
goodtemps.jpg

Here is the temperatures from my simple water cooling loop tfc 120mm rad with push pull 1200rpm fans, ek 4.0 pump undervolted to 7v and a cheap ocz water block and i find it much quieter than when i had true air cooler also i can push my over clocks a lot more without getting anywhere near max temperature.
What case do you currenlt have?
 
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Thanks for the replies everyone, I'm currently running an old Intel C2D 2.4@3ghz cooled by a Tuniq Tower 120 on an abit aw9d-max in an Antec Sonata mk 1, so I'm looking to buy a whole new system for christmas and I'm getting rather fed up with replacing case fans all the time as I run my system 24/7.
I would have moved to water cooling much earlier but didn't like the idea of mixing electricity and water.

Cheers all.
 
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