Car radiator

Those fans will be very noisy.

Car rads are large enough that with the right choice of rad and the right setup you could run it passively without any issues...

Sam
 
You need some seriously strong pumps to get decent flow rate through a car radiator, add to the fact that you need some epic stepping down of the inlet and outlet to your average W/C loop hosing diameter.

More hassle than it's worth.
 
I'm using a heater core from a range rover which I bought new for £30 - it has standard 1/2" fittings and is the perfect size for 2x120mm fans (Coudl fit 4 in PP of course). Teamed this up with a Hydor L30 II pump (£25) and 2 Yate looms 120mm and I'm getting better temps on my 2600K@5Ghz (7C Lower) than my friends identical setup, except he plashed about £600 on a DD custom kit. His looks a lot nicer tho - LOL
 
I like the idea of a passive rad, I may have to get one and see how it goes.
I'm trying to keep the budget down as far as I can, the biggest issue is which waterblock.
 
I like the idea of a passive rad, I may have to get one and see how it goes.
I'm trying to keep the budget down as far as I can, the biggest issue is which waterblock.

Ive been using one for the past 7-8 years.

Remove those fans, as said they are hellishly noisy.
What Ive done is build a shroud and use 2 x 140mm Yate loons running at 8 volts (almost silent ).

If you are going to use a large car radiator, try and get hold of an older type, ie made from brass and copper rather than aluminium or plastic, they are allot easier to work with, especially for attaching/changing fittings.
 
If you want some numbers

As said I'm using a car rad, specifically a Montego 2.0i ( copper/brass version ) radiator with a central heating pump grafted on to circulate the coolant.
Attached to the rad is a shroud with 2 140mm yate loon fans running at 8v ( 600 rpm approx)

The system is cooling an i5 760 at 3.8Ghz and a GTX470 at 824/2000.

The water temperature at idle is approx 1.5 oC above ambient and under load ie a good session on Crysis 2 the water only ever gets to approx 6 oC above ambient. Resulting in a CPU that rarely touches 50 oC and the GPU Hits 45 ish.
 
Brings back memories. I used to run a loop with a Mark 2 ford fiesta heater core that I picked up from the scrapyard. Paired it with an eheim pond pump. I think they might still be in my garage somewhere...
 
Now that's what I'm talkin' 'bout :D
I used to use a spare aquarium pump, I'm looking to do similar again. I did consider using a central heating pump, but they use about twice the power on minimum (which ends up as more heat in the system).
 
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