The Shard (WIP)

Soldato
Joined
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I did not initially plan to do a log so only took snaps here and there for my own benefit initially. I did not take the best of pictures throughout what has become a hobby or sorts, and an expensive one at that, so apologise in advance.

Anyways this is my adventure to complete my first build and first watercooling attempt as it goes. For some background info on this,I started planning this first build a few months back and initially put together whatever in terms of components really being a total noob. The first initial attempt at the build was only completed back in Mid-March centered initially around the NZXT 820 case (so big its ridiculous!) and a placeholder R9 280x while these mythical R9 300 cards come out to power the LG 34UC97-S.

Anyhows I put together the the key components for what lasted a total of 2 hours Which looked like:
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However it seemed the GPU did not work properly so needed to be RMA’s. Fortunately this was the lats thing I brought so was still returnable. This is when things changed for the worse (at least for my wallet). While sending it back I came across the picture of the In Win Tou. Now bare in mind I still technically did not finish my first build, I knew I had to buy this case!.

However I knew some of my components such as the noctua cooler, and red MSI board would not go with this new buet so also like any sane person splashed out on buying new components.

This means effectively I have loads of duplicate parts which have been relegated and 1 day after taking the NZXT 820 out the box for the initial shot at my first build, its now back in the same box and in the garage taking up a majority of the space. :(

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So I knew from the start that I needed to watercool the build so joined these lovely forums to get some information on drain ports etc, thanks for the help. Anyways its still work in progress but these are the parts to date:

Parts in build
  • 4790k
  • Corsair 4 x 4GB 1600 Mhz Ram (to fit under what was to be the noctua cooler)
  • Asus Z97 - AR board (primarily for the aesthetics)
  • HXi 1000W PSU
  • Sleeved graphite cabling kit + Additional silver sleeved cabling for IO ports/ USB etc
  • 2 x Crucial MX100 512GB SSD’s
  • Some cheap CD drive (not actually in the case itself, only for initial installation of windows)
  • Wireless card
  • In Win Tou
  • LG 34UC97-S

Water Cooling components
  • EKWB D5 PWM pump
  • EKWB Coolstream PE 360mm rad
  • EKWB Supremacy Evo CPU block
  • 120mm Primochill Clear Res
  • 240mm Primochill Clear Res (when I found out 120 looked too small, but still kept)
  • Alphacool Hardtube Black Metal Chrome 13/10mm tubing
  • 20 x Primochill Black Shiny Ghost Compression Fittings
  • Shedload of Bitspower Black Shiny components for the rest of the connectors
  • Couple of Leds
  • 3 x Noctua Redux fans for the Gray colour really, included fans were ridiculously loud.
  • Loads of tools which I found out were utterly useless (apart from the gloves and one ruler)
  • Mayhems Aurora 2 Silver (which I gather may actually be a no no now, but can get away with as the loop is fairly simple)

Relegated parts - Parts I still own and were used for a sum of 2 hours:(
  • NZXT 820 Phantom
  • MSI Gaming 5
  • Coolermaster V850
  • NH-DH15
  • Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 3 (reused the 135 mm fan, and long story why I have 2 air towers)
  • 3 additional 140 mm Noctua NF-AF FLX fans

To be honest I could easily put something together and get a fully functioning second PC as most the parts are already there. so will see what I can do there

Okay so to start with Phase 2 of build one I received the case, its extremely hard to photograph a case which is essentially a mirror when its off so apologise for the awkward pics.
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Next I drew up my my highly detailed masterplan for the case and was kindly informed how metal tubing works and need for a drain port which I ran through here for advice.
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Next it was a matter of cracking on and receiving the parts:
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Baby steps of putting the parts together and into the case to see how spacing and fittings worked.
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Initial attempt with the 140 mm res at which point I realised a slighty larger 240 mm would look better. also for whatever sad reason one of my favourite parts is the mounting of the SSD's in the case. Its so simple yet my one of my personal highlight, but loved that once the stickers were of the SSD's they blended in perfectly with the case, mounted being the red.

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Anyways it now comes down to cutting the pipe. This was absolutely brutal. I simply assumed the stuff would bend fairly easy having watched some videos and me being Popeye ( :) ) it would be fine. Sadly I neglected to factor in the stuff I brought was Chrome plated copper pipe which seemed to make bending process ridiculously hard, well impossible really, I went out and brought some “heavy duty” tools from B&Q and still it would not bend! I am sure there are better tools, but could not faff around and elected to just buy a shedload more Bitspowered parts and use them rather then bends. Still happy with how it turned out, but very annoyed at my lack of research for this which made the whole water cooling part cost far more than expected. In hindsight I may have gone for Acrylic, but hay ho.

Also I found that using the pipe cutting tools and being chrome plated (the root cause issue) meant each cut took about 30 mins to do. In the end to cut all the pipes took me about a week as I was getting serious friction burns so the process was stretched out over a couple of weeks.

For the pipes I also had to cut them to size and freeze them so they would shrink ever so slightly and heat up the compression fittings as it was a very tight fit in most cases.

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Anyhows it was a matter of slowly and methodically working, testing and trying the various parts for the best part of 2 weeks, trying to find the best way to route cables set up the watercooling etc. tweeking fittings etc:
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After that, managed to get it to the current stage which I am happy with.
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I used some of the chrome piping filled with soft sponge as a base of sorts for the d5 pump and it works fairly well.

My next plan is to create a PSU shroud which will stretch all the way along the bottom to compartmentalize the PSU, pump and drain port. At the moment as I say I am waiting on the R9 300 / 980Ti. but the current plan is to go crossfire / SLI, not sure if the 360 mm rad would be able to sufficiently cool the CPU and GPU??? That's the route I would like to take, but doubt 1 360 mm Rad can cool 1 CPU + 2 GPU's.

Anyways still some work to do over the next few weeks or so, but fairly happy with how things stand at the moment, and more importantly, nearly there with my first complete build! :D

Cheers
Radox
 
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Wow that looks immense !! love it :D:D

What's the screen like in person ? I'm contemplating a super wide when I come to upgrade !

Thanks all

As for the monitor, I love it. Having jumped from 1080p to this its phenomenal. In person everything is razer sharp and so much easier to work with. Took a bit of adjustment going from a 24 inch screen to this, but going back is so difficult. Using my work laptop now is painful :( Everything from games to using it for work where I can have documents open side by side in pretty much normal view makes life so much easier. Having said that my screen does exhibit some back-light bleed which I gather is a common issue to LG screens, but as I rarely use it with all the lights off, its perfectly fine.
 
I bet it looks immense ! ... thats the only thing that's putting me off buying one is the black light bleeding , is it just bad luck to get that or do they all get it ? And how noticeable is it ?

Cheers all, heh I need to keep my wallet shut for abit. Thankfully the Titan x was out of stock when I was prowling :D

In response to the back light bleed, I gather sadly that it seems to be something common to a lot of the LG panels. From what I gather it seems you will get some light bleed but how noticeable / bad it will be is pot luck. I believe some people have sent back panels to LG to see if they can resolve the issue and it seems hit and miss on getting them back.

For myself, its only noticeable when I am doing something with the lights off and the edges are black such as Netflix which does not show in 21:9 ratio or with games like Elite dangerous which has the black part of spaces on the edge. I generally don't mind the bleed as I am rarely in the dark and like to have a lamp on. But the pics below show what my panel looks like with all the lights off. Note: my Camera is not the best, but think it shows a good example.

Typical view:
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Netflix:
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Fully black Background:
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So sadly not pretty by any means with the lights all of, it becomes very noticeable. For myself as I say not an issue, but gather a lot of people do have issues / screens similar to this where it could be an issue. I think some of the panels such as the Samsung which uses slightly different technology does not suffer this issue as much.
 
Cheers all, yeah had few pics to make this log. The case does look quiet unique, seems to be like marmite, hate it or love it for people who have seen it so far. Just trying to determine how to go about making a shroud out of glass, hopefully will clean up the PSU area.

For the monitor, I would not have been to pleased with as is, but I only noticed after couple of weeks or so, and that was specifically after reading a thread on the forums showing pictures of black backgrounds in the dark that I checked myself! At that stage I could not afford to be without it :)
 
Just a small update, still waiting on getting a GPU, ideally the Titan X, but was only expecting a self built PC to be around £2000 (ish) need to be somewhat more scrupulous with spending money otherwise the GF will be a wee bit mad :)

Anyways, I tried to produce a shroud to cover the the PSU / Pump and various cables to give it a bit of a cleaner look. First of all took measurements during which I knocked one of the pipes, which turned out I did not tighten enough so had a lovely leak! First build mistakes I guess!

Anyways using the heatgun for acrylic, bent the first sheet into shape, but left it on for a tad too long so distorted the mirror effect down the bend site.

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Annoyingly sheet 2 was scratched and sheet 3 which did shape correctly, snapped slightly while cutting, leave a nice crack down. New sheets just arrived, but I think I will likely wait until I get a GPU. I will likely re-jig the watercooling loop so will drill the positions after once its finalized.

Additionally another small change was to buy the Aquaworks LED hub with few strips of cables. Admittedly I love the clean look of the white lights in the case, but was interested to see how the case lit up with colors.

I have to admit this thing is amazing, each strip can be controlled independently so you can create different zonal effects. But by far, the best feature is that the RGB color hub reads the temperature of your water (install a small component which doubles as reading water temperature) or AIDA 64 inputs so the lights will change based on the temperature gradient.

In my case, the lights are a very faint white up to about 30 degrees at which point you can only see the metal loop through the cases tinted window. Useful as this is when I am typically using the PC for working or browsing.

As it gets hotter during gaming, the LED's will go through the spectrum from blue to red and all the colors in between with the set up I use. some poor quality pics below with messy cables which will be sorted

some of the varying effects you can get with independent control for a srip
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This one reminds me of spiderman
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I normally have the loop set up to stay on a very low white light up to 30 degrees, which produces only enough light to reflect off of the chrome pipes, which is all you see from the outside. as it heats up it goes to a slightly brighter white then through the spectrum of colors starting at:
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The finally ending up at at very strong red which only happens if I am hammering it hard during bench-marking (60ish degrees), really does remind me of a volcano or what hell would look like :eek:
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Lovely build. Interested to see how long the Mayhems Aurora 2 will last, based on what I have read about it. I am about to use it in my rig too, so we will have some good comparisons to see how long it will hold up.

Cheers gents.

Indeed, will be interesting to see how long it lasts. I neglected to do proper research before buying so did not realize it was a more short term effect. Having said that, going through the Mayhems thread, it seems as it stands the current simple loop I have should be okay for it. To date its been running perfectly fine with no visible loss in vibrancy for couple of weeks. May remove it in a few months having said that when i come to adding GPU's to the loop.

We shall see. It does look pretty amazing either way however :)
 
Apologise I did not update this build log for awhile I was waiting for it to be fully complete. However I was looking at starting a new log for my second build which will be a HTPC so thought I would update this which still needs the Titans X's to be thrown under water. Annoyingly I managed to strip the screws on one of them, but been getting help in another thread here (thanks :) )

PS. sorry for a lot of the pics being in the dark, the case shows up very reflective in camera with lights on (need a better camera).

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In all, I am happy with the build as a first attempt but few things and issues so far. I had a wireless card, which in the pics will be a acrylic box above the first TX, but as the rear area is covered by a glass with a small opening for the cables only, the signal strength was poor, so had to buy a USB wireless adaptor which works great.

Not a big fan of the lightbars in the RAM, but for some reason the original sticks came with a totally different finish from one another which annoyed me more.

Finally, not a huge fan of the fittings for the loops curves. Alas I found the material I brought impossible to bend without cracking the finish on the pipes so employed these fittings. I think I will see if I can strip them out when I add the Titan x's to the loop.

And one of My TX's undergoing surgery (to remove the stripped screw) :(

Hopefully once the screw is out I can re plan my loop somewhat

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I really wish that case wasn't so nice... Or so expensive, either works.

Lovely job either way.

Yeah sadly my inital budget kind of got blown. Figured I can reuse the case for a while so its not too bad (so I tell myself :D)

Still looking great, Radox, one of my favourite builds on the forums.

Got a lot to live up to now for second build ;)

Cheers buddy :), Heh am quiet please with how its turning out outside of few issues here and there. Fortunately lots of inspiration in some other amazing builds around here.

Wow that build and case look amazing. Love the way the LED's change with the temp, awesome idea

Cheers, yeah quiet happy with the little product :) Stumbled across it by chance / luck when I was about to grab the NZXT hue. Works pretty well as it integrates into the water loop.
 
Looking excellent still! How is the Aurora 2 holding up, its hard to tell from these photos?

Cheers guys. In regards to the Aurora 2, its lost a little bit of its vibrancy, but I expect its because I have a dead zone near the drain port area.

But you still get a lot of the great effect of Aurora 2 after the pump runs on a high RPM for a few moments so its all pretty great still. Usually the Pump runs on a High RPM until in windows so it usually manages to get the fluid and Aurora 2 particles moving again.
 
Sounds good, I'm looking at putting this in my system.

I really love that case... I just wish I could build a system that would actually fit in it (I have severe issues with "over building" my rigs).

That's the AquaComputer Farbwerk that's powering your LED's right?

Cheers, yeah the case is definitely one of my fav parts, though as your rightly point out some compromises do need to be made, i.e no HDD support with the waterloop in place :(. You are correct most of the strips are on the Farbwerk lighting kit, A couple of White strips located next to the Farbwerk controlled strips however are controlled by the front I/O panel. I find the LED's connected to the Farbwerk do not really produce a nice white color.

It looks absolutely stunning. It's better than the building :D

Thanks buddy :)

very nice build. good work.

Cheers :)
 
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