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I have been going through refreshing a friends Pc with a 980Ti in another thread... but in looking around at other builds I have seen that lots of people are using huge amounts of radiators in their builds..
The system is a 4770K @ 4Ghz and it has been running an overclocked 7970 gfx card in the same loop with a single 240mm rad with 2 static pressure fans blowing air in from the front of the case
It has always worked fine, and unless its getting maxxed out by a game its pretty silent most of the time..
the 7970 is getting replaced by a 980Ti.. which has a lower TDP so i expect no problems maintaining this current setup?
What confuses me is why i see builds with 2 or 3 radiators in them.. ok some are SLI systems but most have the same or similar CPUs and much bigger cases.
Am i missing something? am i under cooling my system? (it never gets past 60 degrees in games GPU or CPU)
or do people just like spending money on unnecessary parts?
the system:
The system is a 4770K @ 4Ghz and it has been running an overclocked 7970 gfx card in the same loop with a single 240mm rad with 2 static pressure fans blowing air in from the front of the case
It has always worked fine, and unless its getting maxxed out by a game its pretty silent most of the time..
the 7970 is getting replaced by a 980Ti.. which has a lower TDP so i expect no problems maintaining this current setup?
What confuses me is why i see builds with 2 or 3 radiators in them.. ok some are SLI systems but most have the same or similar CPUs and much bigger cases.
Am i missing something? am i under cooling my system? (it never gets past 60 degrees in games GPU or CPU)
or do people just like spending money on unnecessary parts?
the system:
Last edited:
, i remember reading sumwhere that a typical 360 rad can remove bout 200 watts at tickover on fans, and maybe 500w on 1500 rpm, so im guessing you could just turn off the fans to one of the rads for now and still keep the water temps just above room temp.