Project: External Cooling

Soldato
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
Warning: this project probably won't be much to look at, it's more about the best way to set things up for optimal cooling etc.. (I know, yawn :p)

Something I've wanted to do for a while is have a system that's full custom water cooled, but have the cooling separate from the room I'm using the PC in. Because over time I've realised that even with water cooling, the heat has to go somewhere. I really noticed this when I moved house as my system is in an office downstairs, and while the office is plenty big for a PC system I've really noticed the heat build up from the radiator fans and particular with VR the room gets really toasty (I don't think the foam headset helps).

Luckily, my office is adjacent to my garage so I have some interesting options. :)

I originally planned to use an external radiator by an open window, and while I was seeking some advice on the best way to do this (intake versus extract etc..) things just kind of... Well grew arms and legs I suppose.

I'll update the next post with where I've got to so far, and hopefully I can get some advice on the small details in terms of what components to use, how to set up the radiators etc..
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
This is the PC as it's set up at the minute.

XiotxzD.jpg

What I want to achieve, is to have the CPU & GPU under water with custom blocks and have nothing else in there in terms of water cooling. No radiators, pumps, reservoirs or anything else that will produce heat or noise. I'll keep the inline temperature sensor there as I'll need to hook that up to an Aquaero LT6 that's in the PSU compartment. I'll also keep some case fans but they'll only be called into action if they are needed, so will be 0 rpm unless required.
 
Last edited:
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
I had to get a radiator into the garage and do some testing to see how this will work out so first up, it's some hammer action with the battery drill. I routed 2 hoses and also a signal cable for the PWM control of the fans to the garage next door.

wDJwpJI.jpg

tPGlFmM.jpg

PnsG1zA.jpg

iPaUVpT.jpg

Next, I bought some shelves from Homebase, a bargain at £20 IMO.

9Ud4KiG.jpg

I then stuck some swivel 90 fittings on and connected up the external hoses.

aEeyzNi.jpg

XiotxzD.jpg

y3is2iP.jpg

e9Jv9w0.jpg

nNvk1y2.jpg

Next, I hooked the hoses up to the external radiator. I've made it so that I can easily disconnect at the radiator and drain if I need to, and I've stuck a 600w EVGA PSU in there to power the 4 fans.

cj06aVv.jpg

Ef3rEGq.jpg

sE7ZpAy.jpg

60dahdq.jpg

tFTt009.jpg

This is how I could've left it, however the Mercury hit 0 degrees and I'm realising that there's going to be icicles hanging from my 1080Ti come January :eek:

So I had to think err.. inside the box. ;)
 
Last edited:
Associate
Joined
5 Nov 2013
Posts
1,300
Location
Ireland
Was very interested in your other thread about this.

Just a thought, would it be good to have 2 quick disconnects at back of the PC so you can disconnect the PC from the external loop with ease? :)
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
Was very interested in your other thread about this.

Just a thought, would it be good to have 2 quick disconnects at back of the PC so you can disconnect the PC from the external loop with ease? :)

Yes, I'll have one more post to update and that'll be me up to date with where I'm at just now.

I did consider quick disconnects, but the way it is just now is actually really easy. When I unscrew one tube very little water comes out because there's no way for air to get in and replace it. All I do is disconnect one line, fit caps and then disconnect the next line. Quick disconnects are quite expensive and they take up more room than I'd like.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
I decided to fit a little bypass and then mount the radiator properly.

TWWzdmj.jpg

uaMik2y.jpg

GhWeLnL.jpg

KntSyyD.jpg

bLfZj9A.jpg

I boxed it all in and applied some insulation to make it snug. I've also installed an anti-condensation heater and a frost stat.

ZhQEayi.jpg

oD85Y4w.jpg

9P8vrRv.jpg

ifr80Sy.jpg

Finally, I've installed a little flap on top that will keep the heat in if it's Brrr.. and this will lift up automatically to let the hot air out when the fans ramp up to 100% when gaming.

5ihSG2s.jpg

PH08j19.jpg

This is working really well. The room is now comfortable no matter how long I've been gaming, and the loudest component is now the PSU (that'll need to be dealt with). As mentioned in the OP I now want to get all the water cooling equipment into this external enclosure. There's also some wee improvements I want to make.

I'll now have a wee think, seek some further advice in the relevant section of the forums and update as I progress. :)
 
Last edited:
Associate
Joined
28 Aug 2014
Posts
2,228
maybe you can buy some extensions for the PSU cables and have both PSUs in the other room? threw that at you off the top of my head quickly so cant see any reason why this cant be done.
 
Soldato
Joined
11 Jun 2003
Posts
5,081
Location
Sheffield, UK
Why not just put the whole PC in the garage, pass HDMI and USB (to a hub) through the wall? :)

Could make it nice and neat with a finished plate either side. The power switch is just pass 2 pins through and connect up to the switch header and power LED back the other way if so inclined.

You could take it all out of the case, mount it however you liked, have industrial fans keeping the thing as cool as you like and hear nothing.

I considered at one point running a good chunk of cat5/6 to various rooms back to the basement. Pass audio, USB and HDMI over them using converters and basically any room can take monitor, keyboard, mouse and have control of the computer.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
@D1craig that wouldn't work. I had to buy a 900mm long thermistor cable to get from PC to garage and it only just reaches.

@Mercutio I had thought about that originally, but I ruled it out due to the amount of cables I'd have to bring back through, particularly USB as I have a VR setup plus wheel and pedals etc.. what kind of hub would reliably provide the USB interface?

I also think I'd need to keep it custom water, because I'd have performance issues in summer, particularly with the Pascal GPU. As you say, I could ditch the case and make a bespoke setup. This is definitely an option. :)
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Jul 2006
Posts
7,686
An idea I played with...however I was also thinking of venting the exhaust fan out into the garage.

All that changed when I moved from the AMD 8350 to Ryzen 1600 and the heat is no where near the same.

Did you take note of temps before and after? If it is anything like my garage in the summer it gets roasting once the sun hits, the insulation will help then also.
 
Soldato
Joined
11 Jun 2003
Posts
5,081
Location
Sheffield, UK
@D1craig that wouldn't work. I had to buy a 900mm long thermistor cable to get from PC to garage and it only just reaches.

@Mercutio I had thought about that originally, but I ruled it out due to the amount of cables I'd have to bring back through, particularly USB as I have a VR setup plus wheel and pedals etc.. what kind of hub would reliably provide the USB interface?

I also think I'd need to keep it custom water, because I'd have performance issues in summer, particularly with the Pascal GPU. As you say, I could ditch the case and make a bespoke setup. This is definitely an option. :)

Hmm... I'd... think any decent USB3 hub would be... completely fine. Have it powered the office side. Now, yeah, fair enough on 2 hdmi/displayport but the rest would be simple.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
Did you take note of temps before and after? If it is anything like my garage in the summer it gets roasting once the sun hits, the insulation will help then also.

Yea, it's a strange thing I'm seeing (well, strange IMO). Temperatures were too good when I had the radiator just sitting on a shelf in the garage, which is why I knew I had to install the insulation and heater etc.. else the water would freeze. However, it's pretty much identical to having the radiators in the case now that I've installed the insulated enclosure. It's like the enclosure is just an extension of the office, and I actually think the 240 radiator in the PC case helps this as it heats the fluid up as it tries to equalise with the case temperature (22°C). I also think when the external radiator fans are at 30% (250 RPM) that instead of pushing air out of the enclosure, it just re-circulates it around and heats the enclosure up. This is excellent in winter, but as you say come the summer it'll be too toasty.

I've actually reversed one of the fans in the internal 240 rad so that when the fluid is colder than the office room temperature it actually pulls the cool air into the case, which keeps the motherboard etc.. cool and it also helps to heat the fluid back up as it is essentially pulling hot air from the office through the internal radiator and that in turn gets transferred to the external enclosure via the external radiator. I'm convinced that this system relies on the two radiators equalising with each other at idle to ensure that the water can't freeze.

When the PC is gaming, the internal radiator fans go to 0 RPM and the external radiator fans go to 100%. The downside to this is that the external radiator isn't getting the benefit of the colder air when it really needs it. I sort of want to have my cake and eat it. :p

This is working really well just now, but I definitely need to refine the design for 24/7/365 use. Here's a snapshot of what's going on just now as maybe a picture can explain things better than the written word. Look at the external enclosure temperature; 12.5°C. Look at the fluid temperature; 22°C. The external fans are hovering around 200 rpm and the internal fan is pulling cool air off the radiator at 400 rpm. The outside air temperature is currently 5°C, but the enclosure is in double figures and the fluid is 10°C warmer again... and the anti-frost heater is never called into action (it's set to come on at 7°C but it's never been that cold in the enclosure, even though the outside temp has been as low as -2°C).

9dw0Uzo.png
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Jul 2006
Posts
7,686
To be honest, I am not sure being inside the garage water would actually freeze.

I have never had water I store in the garage freeze as although it does get very cold never cold enough to actually freeze. This is both in an integral and separate garage.

If it was me, I would try running with the radiator it the enclosure again and see what you can actually achieve temp/overclock wise!
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
To be honest, I am not sure being inside the garage water would actually freeze.

I have never had water I store in the garage freeze as although it does get very cold never cold enough to actually freeze. This is both in an integral and separate garage.

If it was me, I would try running with the radiator it the enclosure again and see what you can actually achieve temp/overclock wise!

I'm not sure where you live, but in Lanarkshire it isn't unusual to have temperatures as low as -25°C in winter. Freezing isn't the only risk, I also need to make sure the fluid doesn't get too cold or there is a risk of condensation on the GPU and associated tubing in the PC. Basically, if the fluid was e.g. 4°C and the internal case temperature was 25°C I'm pretty sure I'd end up with condensation.

Whilst low temperature would be interesting from a performance point of view, the primary purpose of this setup for me is to get the heat and noise out of the office and into the garage. Also, in terms of day to day GPU/CPU performance it's actually more beneficial to maintain a consistent low (15°C) temperature than it is to hit very low temperatures. The only way to acheive consistent low temperatures is:

  • Maximum radiator space
  • Highest possible RPM on the fans when the rig is under load.
  • Lowest possible air intake temperature when the fans hit 100%.
That's the 3 areas that I'll be focused on when I do the new enclosure. The low air intake temperature will be the hardest one to achieve, due to the condensation risk. Basically, I can only allow low temp air intake when the fans are at 100% RPM so I need to devise some sort of damper system.
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Jul 2006
Posts
7,686
I'm not sure where you live, but in Lanarkshire it isn't unusual to have temperatures as low as -25°C in winter. Freezing isn't the only risk, I also need to make sure the fluid doesn't get too cold or there is a risk of condensation on the GPU and associated tubing in the PC. Basically, if the fluid was e.g. 4°C and the internal case temperature was 25°C I'm pretty sure I'd end up with condensation.

Whilst low temperature would be interesting from a performance point of view, the primary purpose of this setup for me is to get the heat and noise out of the office and into the garage. Also, in terms of day to day GPU/CPU performance it's actually more beneficial to maintain a consistent low (15°C) temperature than it is to hit very low temperatures. The only way to acheive consistent low temperatures is:

  • Maximum radiator space
  • Highest possible RPM on the fans when the rig is under load.
  • Lowest possible air intake temperature when the fans hit 100%.
That's the 3 areas that I'll be focused on when I do the new enclosure. The low air intake temperature will be the hardest one to achieve, due to the condensation risk. Basically, I can only allow low temp air intake when the fans are at 100% RPM so I need to devise some sort of damper system.

Ah yeah didn't see the location! Whilst in North Yorkshire we can get a bit cold, nowhere near yours!!
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
6 Jan 2013
Posts
21,846
Location
Rollergirl
Update: Design plans are taking shape.

w7w36xb.png


It's a two compartment system, where the lower compartment is doing all the cooling to the fluid via Radiator 3 with fan C pulling in all the cool air that gets blown back out the bottom via the radiator. Even if the ambient is in the minus, fan C will be 100% because the cooling process will only be triggered if the fluid is getting hot (rig under load). This is crucial as it means I can take full advantage of freezing temperatures without risking frozen fluid or condensation.

Radiator 2 exists for the low winter temperatures and it'll prevent the components from freezing. During mild/summer weather, the fans on this rad will be 0 RPM and the radiator will be dormant/passive. - I might not include this in the initial build, as radiator 1 may be enough.

Radiator 1 will kick in when required to assist radiator 3 in the summer, and will be passive when not required - during winter this rad may be enough to heat the enclosure if the fans are low RPM. Fans A & B will assist with the cooling during summer by feeding in cool air and pulling out the hot.

Fans A & B will only be called into action if the top compartment goes above a pre-determined (hot) temperature.

Fans A, B & C will probably be 140mm and will open and close dampers depending on whether they are required or not.

The fan damper system is the curveball as I don't know yet how to achieve that part of the design, but it's definitely a pivotal aspect so needs to be worked out. I won't be doing any work on this until I've sussed out how to get a 140mm PC fan opening and closing a damper flap with success.

I will include a heater and frost stat, I've just omitted from the graphic for clarity.

All temperature control and fan control will be handled by an Aquaero LT6.
 
Last edited:
Soldato
Joined
19 Mar 2012
Posts
6,567
To be honest, I am not sure being inside the garage water would actually freeze.

I have never had water I store in the garage freeze as although it does get very cold never cold enough to actually freeze. This is both in an integral and separate garage.

If it was me, I would try running with the radiator it the enclosure again and see what you can actually achieve temp/overclock wise!

It can, I once rented a house with a tap inside the garage, one night while smoking in the garden I heard a weird noise from the garage.

I can only assume it got so cold it burst a pipe as when I opened the door something had blown somewhere and I spent 5 mins trying to switch of the water supply in the dark with water spraying all over in sub zero conditions.
 
Back
Top Bottom