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[Case Gallery] My beast

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
To view this case mod, go here.



Specs:
Intel E6850
Asus P5W DH Deluxe
G.Skill F2-6400PHU1-2GBHZ
Sapphire Radeon HD 2900XT
4 x 250 GB Seagate 7200.10 (Raid 0/5)
Lite-On LightScribe DL DVD-RW
Thermaltake ToughPower 750W Power Supply
Lian Li PC-A10B
Swiftech Storm Rev. 2
Swiftech MCR320-QP-K
Danger Den D5 Variable Speed Pump

Mods:
Added sound dampening throughout, Cut open top for 3 x 120mm radiator,
Wire management
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Fuse-Wire

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May 30, 2007
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Scotland, Far away from normality as possible
System Name The Box
Processor DualCore AMD Athlon 64 X2 2300MHz (11.5x200) 4400+
Motherboard AsRock N 68-S
Cooling Basic 90mm fans
Memory OCZ XTC Platinum 2GB DDR-2 800 SDRAM
Video Card(s) ATI Saphire x1650 Pro Series
Storage Maxtor 6L300R0 (300GB) Maxtors S (250GB)
Display(s) 19" LCD CTX
Case EYE-T
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC650 @ Intel 82801DB ICH4 - AC'97 Audio Controller [B-0]
Power Supply 600W colors-IT super quiet
Software Microsoft 7 Ultimate
oooh, i have a thing for black cases, they just look so sleek n sexy!! 10/10 i really do like this case alot
 
Joined
Sep 5, 2006
Messages
234 (0.04/day)
Location
Brasil - São Paulo - São Caetano do Sul
System Name NOS
Processor Core Extreme QX6850
Motherboard Maximus Formula
Cooling VANTEC STING RAY CPU Block, 3x120mm fan's with Radiator, Seltz 1200lt/h
Memory 4GB Crucial Ballistix 1066MHz 5-5-5-15
Video Card(s) PCI-express ATI Radeon HD2900XT 1GB DDR4 512bits
Storage 5 HD's 160GB SATAII Seagate ST3860815AS 7200.10
Display(s) LG 22'' model 22LS4R
Case 3Rsystem's R810 with mod's for watercooler system
Audio Device(s) Supreme FX II
Power Supply ULTRA X3 1000W modular PSU
Software WINXP PRO SP3 x86

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
Thanks. As for the reservoir, it was recommended to me to just use a T-line when I first started watercooling, as that reservoirs typically slow down the flow rate (more 90 degree bends).

Don't forget to vote guys :toast:
 
Joined
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Messages
234 (0.04/day)
Location
Brasil - São Paulo - São Caetano do Sul
System Name NOS
Processor Core Extreme QX6850
Motherboard Maximus Formula
Cooling VANTEC STING RAY CPU Block, 3x120mm fan's with Radiator, Seltz 1200lt/h
Memory 4GB Crucial Ballistix 1066MHz 5-5-5-15
Video Card(s) PCI-express ATI Radeon HD2900XT 1GB DDR4 512bits
Storage 5 HD's 160GB SATAII Seagate ST3860815AS 7200.10
Display(s) LG 22'' model 22LS4R
Case 3Rsystem's R810 with mod's for watercooler system
Audio Device(s) Supreme FX II
Power Supply ULTRA X3 1000W modular PSU
Software WINXP PRO SP3 x86
Thanks. As for the reservoir, it was recommended to me to just use a T-line when I first started watercooling, as that reservoirs typically slow down the flow rate (more 90 degree bends).

Don't forget to vote guys :toast:

Wait. U sad as reservoier slow down the flow? can u write the flow of water?

For me u install pump > rad > cpu > pump right? and the reservoier is in the middle of pump and rad

ask please

bye
 

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
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Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
The flow goes from the pump > CPU > Rad > pump. That's all there is in the loop ATM. I have a Swiftech chipset block and an Alphacool MOSFEt block, but they aren't installed yet. Not sure if I'm going too yet...
 
Joined
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Messages
234 (0.04/day)
Location
Brasil - São Paulo - São Caetano do Sul
System Name NOS
Processor Core Extreme QX6850
Motherboard Maximus Formula
Cooling VANTEC STING RAY CPU Block, 3x120mm fan's with Radiator, Seltz 1200lt/h
Memory 4GB Crucial Ballistix 1066MHz 5-5-5-15
Video Card(s) PCI-express ATI Radeon HD2900XT 1GB DDR4 512bits
Storage 5 HD's 160GB SATAII Seagate ST3860815AS 7200.10
Display(s) LG 22'' model 22LS4R
Case 3Rsystem's R810 with mod's for watercooler system
Audio Device(s) Supreme FX II
Power Supply ULTRA X3 1000W modular PSU
Software WINXP PRO SP3 x86
The flow goes from the pump > CPU > Rad > pump. That's all there is in the loop ATM. I have a Swiftech chipset block and an Alphacool MOSFEt block, but they aren't installed yet. Not sure if I'm going too yet...

hummm now i see the problem u make a mistake when u install it


First u need refrigerate water for the cpu and not the inverse

when u sad that the reservoier slow down im think that u install wrong and now im right about my perception.
 
Last edited:

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
Most reservoirs are a series of 90 degree bends. Any 90 degree bend will slow down the flow of water. I don't have a reservoir because of this, and do not intend on buying one. Thanks for your offer, though...
 

KennyT772

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Dec 21, 2005
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System Name Raptor
Processor Intel E8400 Wolfdale @3600
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Cooling Zalman CNPS9700
Memory 1024mbx2 Crucial Ballistix DDR800
Video Card(s) XFX 9600GT
Storage Seagate 7200.11 500GB
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Power Supply OCZ GameXStream 500w
T-Lines by design have more turbulence. As long as a reservoir is directly before the pump there is no impact on flow rate whatsoever. Completely closed systems are nearly impossible to create. Resivoirs however do make monitoring flow rate easier, by the water turbulence in the res. They also allow you to store more coolant, therby slowing the rate of heatup-cooldown of your pc. Say you had your pc outside overnight, down to 10c. With no res it may take 20 minutes for your coolant temp to level off. With a small res such as the swiftech unit, you can add a couple minutes to that. With the larger ones you can double or triple the amount of time your unit takes to heat up.

The number of blocks and radiators will have a much, much larger affect on flow rate. From there the design of your blocks and radiators have the most affect.

What you are missing though is all important overclocking results!!!
 
Last edited:
Joined
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Location
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System Name NOS
Processor Core Extreme QX6850
Motherboard Maximus Formula
Cooling VANTEC STING RAY CPU Block, 3x120mm fan's with Radiator, Seltz 1200lt/h
Memory 4GB Crucial Ballistix 1066MHz 5-5-5-15
Video Card(s) PCI-express ATI Radeon HD2900XT 1GB DDR4 512bits
Storage 5 HD's 160GB SATAII Seagate ST3860815AS 7200.10
Display(s) LG 22'' model 22LS4R
Case 3Rsystem's R810 with mod's for watercooler system
Audio Device(s) Supreme FX II
Power Supply ULTRA X3 1000W modular PSU
Software WINXP PRO SP3 x86
KennyT772 is right! a T-line create a big turbulance if u can saw watercooling kits instaled look in case gallery u will see that reservoier makes much diference in a W.C kit and did u saw some oxigem bubles in the tubes? if u dont know T_lines are great for space economic but a disgrace to eliminate oxigem bubles and in u case u need to change u flow system becuse its wrong and many people here will agree with me and u wana insert more block´s and those block will slow down the flow as KennyT772 sad.

bye
 

KennyT772

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System Name Raptor
Processor Intel E8400 Wolfdale @3600
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Memory 1024mbx2 Crucial Ballistix DDR800
Video Card(s) XFX 9600GT
Storage Seagate 7200.11 500GB
Display(s) Acer AL2216Wbd and Acer AL1717
Case Gigabyte 3DAurora Black
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Extreme Gamer Faitality
Power Supply OCZ GameXStream 500w
KennyT772 is right! a T-line create a big turbulance if u can saw watercooling kits instaled look in case gallery u will see that reservoier makes much diference in a W.C kit and did u saw some oxigem bubles in the tubes? if u dont know T_lines are great for space economic but a disgrace to eliminate oxigem bubles and in u case u need to change u flow system becuse its wrong and many people here will agree with me and u wana insert more block´s and those block will slow down the flow as KennyT772 sad.

bye

Attacking his setup based on what I said is uncalled for. I posted fact, not opinion. I suggest you do the same from now on. T-Line vs Reservoir vs enclosed is a statistically insignificant difference. You cannot base every single persons system on the whole population, as everyone likes something different.

This thread is for constructive criticism and comments, not bashing someone’s case due to personal preference.
 
Joined
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Messages
234 (0.04/day)
Location
Brasil - São Paulo - São Caetano do Sul
System Name NOS
Processor Core Extreme QX6850
Motherboard Maximus Formula
Cooling VANTEC STING RAY CPU Block, 3x120mm fan's with Radiator, Seltz 1200lt/h
Memory 4GB Crucial Ballistix 1066MHz 5-5-5-15
Video Card(s) PCI-express ATI Radeon HD2900XT 1GB DDR4 512bits
Storage 5 HD's 160GB SATAII Seagate ST3860815AS 7200.10
Display(s) LG 22'' model 22LS4R
Case 3Rsystem's R810 with mod's for watercooler system
Audio Device(s) Supreme FX II
Power Supply ULTRA X3 1000W modular PSU
Software WINXP PRO SP3 x86
Attacking his setup based on what I said is uncalled for. I posted fact, not opinion. I suggest you do the same from now on. T-Line vs Reservoir vs enclosed is a statistically insignificant difference. You cannot base every single persons system on the whole population, as everyone likes something different.

This thread is for constructive criticism and comments, not bashing someone’s case due to personal preference.

Its not "attacking" is a opnion and if u dont saw i mention here "T_lines are great for space economic but a disgrace to eliminate oxigem bubles and if u put more fluid the flow become more slow because the densyti of it

Much manufacturer of water cooling system says and show in theyers manuals first u need to pump water for radiator and not for CPU, reservoier is only use to mix and acumulate water and to make the pump work more easy.

bye ;)
 
Joined
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Messages
11,119 (1.69/day)
System Name Apple Bite
Processor Intel I5
Motherboard Apple
Memory 40gb of DDR 4 2700
Video Card(s) ATI Radeon 500
Storage Fusion Drive 1 TB
Display(s) 27 Inch IMac late 2017
It looks fantasic and I would love to own it.
 

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
Joined
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316 (0.05/day)
Location
Canuckistan
System Name Slave
Processor Core i7 920 @4.2 Lapped
Motherboard Biostar Tpower x58
Cooling Ek Supreme + Backplate, Thermochill 120.3, mcp655
Memory 6Gb Gskill Black Pi ddr3 1600 8-7-7-19 1t
Video Card(s) XFX R9 290 (flashed to 290x) + DTek Fuzion block @1100
Storage Samsung 840 evo, WD Black
Display(s) Asus PB278Q 1440p
Case p180b
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Extreme P.O.S.
Power Supply Enermax Revolution 85+ 950watt
Benchmark Scores i7 920 c0 @ 4.6ghz
Really awesome work. It got a clean look, lot of airflow and is silent.
I can't ask for more... 10/10
 

cdawall

where the hell are my stars
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great job 10/10 :D
 
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System Name Stealth 2 Duo Turbine
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First, Awesome job on cutting the top, your system has a nice look to it with the rad on top, But I was wondering if the 3 fans on top are blowing cool or hot air into your case with the way you have it setup. what temps are you getting, I enjoyed looking thanks.
 

t_ski

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Messages
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System Name My i7 Beast
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Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
According to Core Temp:

Stock (3.0 GHz) 24 idle, 37 load
OC'ed (3.6 GHz) 25 idle, 44 load

According to SpeedFan, the cores are @ 11C idle & CPU at 21C, but that's with the room at 22C, so it's obviously wrong. Motherboard temp is around 34 C.

With the loop, I have the fans pulling in cold air from the room through the radiator and into the case. When it's at idle, everything in the case is cool to the touch. If I had the fans pulling hot air out of the case I don't think temps would be as low, especially with how hot the 2900XT gets.
 
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System Name Stealth 2 Duo Turbine
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Benchmark Scores 3DMark01=NTTA, 3Dmark06=NTTA 3Dmark_Vantage=NTTA, Core Temp v0.99.5=28C
According to Core Temp:

Stock (3.0 GHz) 24 idle, 37 load
OC'ed (3.6 GHz) 25 idle, 44 load

According to SpeedFan, the cores are @ 11C idle & CPU at 21C, but that's with the room at 22C, so it's obviously wrong. Motherboard temp is around 34 C.

With the loop, I have the fans pulling in cold air from the room through the radiator and into the case. When it's at idle, everything in the case is cool to the touch. If I had the fans pulling hot air out of the case I don't think temps would be as low, especially with how hot the 2900XT gets.

I would think if the water in the rad is warm it would blow hot,, like for a car with heat
 

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
When it's at idle, everything in the case is cool to the touch.

Only when the system is under load, which isn't very often, would the rad be warm and thus pushing warm air into the system. My comment above was about it being idle. Having a rad mounted like that leaves you with only two choices: pulling cool air into the case (making the case temps go up), or pulling warm/hot air from the case through the rad (making the CPU temps go up). Like I said, most of the time the CPU isn't under load, so for maximum cooling of the CPU I chose to pull air into the case.
 
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Processor Q6600 G0 @ 3.2Ghz
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Video Card(s) Saphire 5850 1GB
Storage 60GB SSD + 2x500GB/1TB/2TB
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Power Supply Enermax Galaxy Dxx 850watt
Software Windows7 32Bit
Benchmark Scores Super Pi 1M 14.333
I like it alot, looks like you put quite a bit of work into it :p

I think you should try having the rear fan blow air in feeding cool air to the rad, Im not sure if the heat off the psu would get sucked in though.. some of it prob would. well when you add your gpu to the loop maybe try that out.
 

SMACK900

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Great water cooling setup, nice radiator mod, 9/10 from me
 
Joined
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Processor Intel C2D E8500 @ 4.25GHz (1.36V)
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Case Ultra Aluminus Full Tower
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Power Supply PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750
Software XP MCE + Vista (HP) dual-boot
Very clean! A build after my own heart!

Great job! 9/10

Bryan
 

t_ski

Former Staff
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Messages
11,960 (1.81/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
I like it alot, looks like you put quite a bit of work into it :p

I think you should try having the rear fan blow air in feeding cool air to the rad, Im not sure if the heat off the psu would get sucked in though.. some of it prob would. well when you add your gpu to the loop maybe try that out.

Hey Chewy - I have the fans pulling the air into the case through the rad, so all three fans are pulling in cool air. I have quite a bit of positive pressure inside the case, only having the PSU, the rear case fan and vents for exhaust.
 
Joined
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System Name Dark Aurora
Processor Intel e6600 @ 4.09ghz
Motherboard ASUS Maximus Formula x38
Cooling Custom Water Cooling on Cpu and Gpu
Memory 4gb Corsair DDR-2 800mhz/ 2gb Patriot DDR-2 1066mhz
Video Card(s) XFX 8800gt 512mb
Storage 160gb Maxtor, 250gb Western Digital, 320gb Maxtor
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Power Supply PC Power and Cooling 750W
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Neohazard, I'm not sure where you get off saying that a t-line has more turbulence than a reservoir. By design a reservoir has water being forced into it and water being sucked out.

While I will agree that getting the air bubbles out of a loop with a t-line is a pain, by design a t-line works by allowing the free flow of water without any kind of restriction.

When you talk about how long it takes the water to heat up, it really doesn't matter. Most people don't run their systems for 10 minutes at a time and the let them sit for an hour to cool off.

Finally, the order in which you put components in the loop is of little consequence, after it has been run for a short period of time, the temperatures will stabilize for the most extent and temperature difference from any one point to the next are negligible. The flow of water is simply too fast for any given amount of water to absorb a statistically significant amount of heat. As a result having a "perfect order" in the loop MIGHT give you a degree or two of benefit.

/End rant/

In regards to the setup, props on the acoustic foam, never had the patience to do that clean a job with it.

Aside from that, maybe try cleaning up the wires a tad bit more and maybe some colored coolant.

8.5/10 = 9/10
 
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