Hello lads,
Before Christmas I embarked on a consolodation of two old PCs into one 'dream build', albeit with the reuse of a 2600K + mobo from a previous build due to Asus' failure to get their ivy-e mobo out to Europe.
I'm not new to water cooling, having been using it since the late 90s, but I've tended to be fairly conserative with the builds, going for function rather than form, as can be seen here with a pair of MountainMods cases:
So this time I thought I'd pull out all the stops and go for a flashy looking rig with braided cables, hidden pumps, those flash connects and more radiator space.
The pump/reservoir combination which I chose was the Monsoon with the D5:
and a new EK 2x120mm thick radiator at the back of the case:
Anyway, to cut a long story short, bleeding the system in this configuration was an absolute swine, involving a lot of turning/twisting/tipping of a relatively heavy box.
To cap it off, the performance of the reservoir/pump seemed terrible - with only a trickle of flow. So I disassembled the reservoir, changed the supplied sealing ring for a thinner 'high performance' one, reassembled, bled the system again (this is a all night operation
), and still the flow is terrible.
As for cooling the components (a 2600K @ 3.4Ghz and a nVidia 780Ti @1200Mhz) the loop seemed to be functioning, keeping the reported GPU temp at around 50 degrees C in Metro Last Light (the most GPU heavy game I have on Linux).
However I also installed inline water temp gauges, which showed that the water was also getting up to 50 degrees C which is beyond my comfort zone for water, its quite hot to touch.
As the bottom thermochill 120.3 rad was only getting hot at the one end, I felt it might be blocked (explaining the poor flow), so rebuilt the system again, using the other 120.3 rad from the other box, and flipping the EK rad upside down and adding a bleed port out the top to try and assist with bleeding.
Anyway to cut a long story short, performance is still below my expectations, so I cut my loses and ordered up a EK 120x3 thick radiator to replace the thermochill. It arrived and I realised the folly of my credit card spending:
It isn't the right size for the case! The EK (bottom) has the fans positioned closer together, which means it won't fit in the holes on the MountainMods case (or any of my fan shrouds).
To cap it all off, the EK 120x2 rad then sprung a leak last night from the barbed connector, which dripped directly into the Corsair 850w PSU directly under it, which seems to have made it a paperweight. And then air has appeared in the loop once more
(excuse the cabling - it is temporarily juryrigged up on an older 600w PSU after the leak)
As you can probably guess, I'm feeling pretty peeved off right now, a frankly daft amount of money (I'm too embarressed to admit how much) has been sunk into this 'dream build' which is turning into a nightmare.
I think I am going to cut my loses once more and revert back to a standard D5 pump and a cylindrical reservoir which 'just worked', and use just 1 3x120mm reservoir.
tldr; can anyone answer the following questions please?
(1) How can I tell before I buy if a radiator will fit my case? Does each radiator use a random spacing, or are there 'some' standards, eg. the two sizes above?
(2) How much cooling can I expect from a 120x3 rad with proper D5 pressure water flow? Is it reasonable to expect it to keep water temp below 50 degrees C with an overclocked Sandybridge CPU + nVidia 780ti @ 1200Mhz?
I'm currently running a trio of fairly powerful of Xigmatek XAF-F1253 pushing air, with another 3 weaker fans pulling on the 120x3 - so air flow is fairly strong.
Before Christmas I embarked on a consolodation of two old PCs into one 'dream build', albeit with the reuse of a 2600K + mobo from a previous build due to Asus' failure to get their ivy-e mobo out to Europe.
I'm not new to water cooling, having been using it since the late 90s, but I've tended to be fairly conserative with the builds, going for function rather than form, as can be seen here with a pair of MountainMods cases:
So this time I thought I'd pull out all the stops and go for a flashy looking rig with braided cables, hidden pumps, those flash connects and more radiator space.
The pump/reservoir combination which I chose was the Monsoon with the D5:
and a new EK 2x120mm thick radiator at the back of the case:
Anyway, to cut a long story short, bleeding the system in this configuration was an absolute swine, involving a lot of turning/twisting/tipping of a relatively heavy box.
To cap it off, the performance of the reservoir/pump seemed terrible - with only a trickle of flow. So I disassembled the reservoir, changed the supplied sealing ring for a thinner 'high performance' one, reassembled, bled the system again (this is a all night operation
), and still the flow is terrible.As for cooling the components (a 2600K @ 3.4Ghz and a nVidia 780Ti @1200Mhz) the loop seemed to be functioning, keeping the reported GPU temp at around 50 degrees C in Metro Last Light (the most GPU heavy game I have on Linux).
However I also installed inline water temp gauges, which showed that the water was also getting up to 50 degrees C which is beyond my comfort zone for water, its quite hot to touch.
As the bottom thermochill 120.3 rad was only getting hot at the one end, I felt it might be blocked (explaining the poor flow), so rebuilt the system again, using the other 120.3 rad from the other box, and flipping the EK rad upside down and adding a bleed port out the top to try and assist with bleeding.
Anyway to cut a long story short, performance is still below my expectations, so I cut my loses and ordered up a EK 120x3 thick radiator to replace the thermochill. It arrived and I realised the folly of my credit card spending:
It isn't the right size for the case! The EK (bottom) has the fans positioned closer together, which means it won't fit in the holes on the MountainMods case (or any of my fan shrouds).
To cap it all off, the EK 120x2 rad then sprung a leak last night from the barbed connector, which dripped directly into the Corsair 850w PSU directly under it, which seems to have made it a paperweight. And then air has appeared in the loop once more
(excuse the cabling - it is temporarily juryrigged up on an older 600w PSU after the leak)
As you can probably guess, I'm feeling pretty peeved off right now, a frankly daft amount of money (I'm too embarressed to admit how much) has been sunk into this 'dream build' which is turning into a nightmare.
I think I am going to cut my loses once more and revert back to a standard D5 pump and a cylindrical reservoir which 'just worked', and use just 1 3x120mm reservoir.
tldr; can anyone answer the following questions please?
(1) How can I tell before I buy if a radiator will fit my case? Does each radiator use a random spacing, or are there 'some' standards, eg. the two sizes above?
(2) How much cooling can I expect from a 120x3 rad with proper D5 pressure water flow? Is it reasonable to expect it to keep water temp below 50 degrees C with an overclocked Sandybridge CPU + nVidia 780ti @ 1200Mhz?
I'm currently running a trio of fairly powerful of Xigmatek XAF-F1253 pushing air, with another 3 weaker fans pulling on the 120x3 - so air flow is fairly strong.
