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-   -   Watercooling Loop Q (http://www.techpowerup.com/forums/showthread.php?t=81659)

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 12:17 AM

Watercooling Loop Q
 
I am planning on have my loop as follows:

________cpu
Pump<_______> radiator - reservoir
______gfx card

(i had to use lines above b.c it removed spaces, so _ = a space)

i would like to use http://www.frozencpu.com/products/74..._UV_Green.html to split the tubes and bring it back together.
i will be using an ek full waterblock for my 9600gt and a dtek fusion for my cpu block
how would this work? would the flow be affected? would one thing be cooled better then the other? would the water for some reason only flow well through one side? is this more effiecent at cooling then having the lines go straight from my cpu to gfx card?

please criticize my planned set up and tell me all your thoughts, and if you link the splitting idea is a good idea!

spearman914 Jan 12, 2009 12:39 AM

Flow shouldn't be a problem. What's ur pump?

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 12:41 AM

let me give you link to the fs thread i bought everyhting from
http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?t=80578&highlight=bnib
i bought the ek waterblock seperatly.

spearman914 Jan 12, 2009 12:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by redwings0921 (Post 1154182)
let me give you link to the fs thread i bought everyhting from
http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?t=80578&highlight=bnib
i bought the ek waterblock seperatly.

The 2way loop will have a tiny impact on temps but the MCP655 is a great pump so no worries.

erocker Jan 12, 2009 12:46 AM

Pump-->Radiator-->CPU-->GPU-->Resevoir-->Pump is the route I'd take.

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 12:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by erocker (Post 1154195)
Pump-->Radiator-->CPU-->GPU-->Resevoir-->Pump is the route I'd take.

but then the heated water form the cpu will go to the gpu.... right?

spearman914 Jan 12, 2009 12:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by redwings0921 (Post 1154198)
but then the heated water form the cpu will go to the gpu.... right?

Yea, but GPU can substain much hotter temps than the CPU so that's not a problem. On my old WC setup, it was Pump-rad-cpu-Res-GPU-pump

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 12:50 AM

cool, and its a lot less complicated then splitting =)

erocker Jan 12, 2009 12:51 AM

I didn't notice you are going to use splitters. Split the loop after the radiator, into each block (CPU/GPU), then another splitter to join the loop before it goes into the resevoir.

So, I geuss the loop I posted still stands except the cpu/gpu are split off.

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 12:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by erocker (Post 1154207)
I didn't notice you are going to use splitters. Split the loop after the radiator, into each block (CPU/GPU), then another splitter to join the loop before it goes into the resevoir.

So, I geuss the loop I posted still stands except the cpu/gpu are split off.

do you think its worth it to split? im just worried about one part getting most of the flow and the other not getting much, if any at all

erocker Jan 12, 2009 01:18 AM

I wouldn't bother with the split. It's really not going to make much of a difference, plus it will be a lot less of a mess with the tubing.

redwings0921 Jan 12, 2009 01:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by erocker (Post 1154246)
I wouldn't bother with the split. It's really not going to make much of a difference, plus it will be a lot less of a mess with the tubing.

thanks. im trust you and go without the splits b.c i just found out shipping would be 6$ on these things. kinda rediculous wen u could just throw em in an envelope...

oily_17 Jan 12, 2009 01:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by erocker (Post 1154195)
Pump-->Radiator-->CPU-->GPU-->Resevoir-->Pump is the route I'd take.

This is the way I would stick with.

Better flow = Better cooling..so using a Y adaptor will split your flow in two and so you will have less cooling in each loop.

aspire Jan 12, 2009 09:37 PM

Only split a loop if each half is going into an identical block, otherwise the pressure difference between the 2 would mean the least restrictive block would get the majority of the flow.


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