- Joined
- Feb 7, 2008
- Messages
- 786 (0.12/day)
- Location
- Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
System Name | Woody |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 9700X |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B650M Aorus Elite AX ICE |
Cooling | MSI MAG A13 CoreLiquid 360 |
Memory | 32GB (2x16) Corsair Vengeance 6000MHz (CL30) |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse RX 9070 |
Storage | WD_BLACK SN850x (2x1TB) + Sandisk Ultra 2TB |
Display(s) | Asus ProArt PA348CGV (3440x1440 @ 120 Hz) |
Case | Lian Li A3 (Black-Wood) |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech Pro X & Scarlett 2i4 w/M-AUDIO BX5-D2 |
Power Supply | Corsair RM750 (ver. 2019) |
Mouse | Logitech MX Master 3 |
Keyboard | Keychron Q1 Pro (Akko Cream Blue Pro V3 switches) |
Software | Windows 10 Pro x64 |
Benchmark Scores | It's over 9000! |
Hello all, so after a couple of requests I decided to create a "Build Log" for this new rig 
The story begins with my PowerMac G5 modded case creating really hot spots between PSU and GPU zone due to the GTX770 expelling a lot more heat than my old HD6850.
The old rig
Despite the nostalgy and all the work invested, I know I have to swap case to improve my cooling while focusing in a more silent rig. After a long search, I decided to get Thermaltake Core V51 (very nice similar lines to PowerMac G5, black, big window and WC ready!) and thought about a loop with new components too, thanks to @fullinfusion and @cadaveca I sorted it in terms of heat dissipation, thanks guys!
New loop design
I had to tour almost all EKWB Europe resellers' webs till I found a full block for my recently acquired GTX770 in Portugal, purchased it; as I didn't had luck finding any original compatible backplate I finally modded the original one to fit. Here's the result:
Then I ordered the rest: the case (TT Core V51), EK-DDC 3.2 combo res & pump, Tygon R-3603 tubing and compression fittings from EKWB and XSPC in black chrome:
And here comes the assembling ....
Let's go with tubing!
And now let's pour some Blue Magic on it (Heisenberg gave me his formula
)
It's going well, no leaks at all, let's picture it from ant view
But shortly after I powered it up a short-circuit happened, resulting in not booting up or whatsoever. Swapped PSU, unplugged components, reset BIOS like 100 times but nothing. The day after after a last try the MoBo set on fire, still guessing why. Killed a lot of hardware with it, including CPU, PSU and 2 HDs.
Nevertheless, this build was going to be called "The Phoenix" from the very first moment, and now it really came to a reason, it had to rebirth from its ashes, more powerful and ready for the future, so I went to the store and purchased a Core i7 4790K and a MSI Z97 Gaming 7, they had to gather the family.
Family Picture
There's no time for surrender, and I will mount the same way as planned ... and here's its complete execution with some kind of cable management
The Phoenix Internals
The Phoenix Full View
Bonus Picture
Hope you liked it, I know I didn't mod yet nothing ... but after the story I had, I will wait before touching anything
Kudos to all and thanks for watching and reading

PS: Some final words to thank @Knoxx29 and @CAPSLOCKSTUCK for moral support in the whole story!!! Also a big thanks to all the people that keeps posting in the thread "YOUR PC ATM" and continues to give ideas and inspiration to all of us, keep up the good work in old TPU style

The story begins with my PowerMac G5 modded case creating really hot spots between PSU and GPU zone due to the GTX770 expelling a lot more heat than my old HD6850.
The old rig

Despite the nostalgy and all the work invested, I know I have to swap case to improve my cooling while focusing in a more silent rig. After a long search, I decided to get Thermaltake Core V51 (very nice similar lines to PowerMac G5, black, big window and WC ready!) and thought about a loop with new components too, thanks to @fullinfusion and @cadaveca I sorted it in terms of heat dissipation, thanks guys!
New loop design

I had to tour almost all EKWB Europe resellers' webs till I found a full block for my recently acquired GTX770 in Portugal, purchased it; as I didn't had luck finding any original compatible backplate I finally modded the original one to fit. Here's the result:


Then I ordered the rest: the case (TT Core V51), EK-DDC 3.2 combo res & pump, Tygon R-3603 tubing and compression fittings from EKWB and XSPC in black chrome:




And here comes the assembling ....

Let's go with tubing!

And now let's pour some Blue Magic on it (Heisenberg gave me his formula


It's going well, no leaks at all, let's picture it from ant view

But shortly after I powered it up a short-circuit happened, resulting in not booting up or whatsoever. Swapped PSU, unplugged components, reset BIOS like 100 times but nothing. The day after after a last try the MoBo set on fire, still guessing why. Killed a lot of hardware with it, including CPU, PSU and 2 HDs.

So after a 2-3 hours with water running, I decide to connect the remaining components and try to power it on. I do it and BOOM, lights blinking in the PSU, kind of short, then it powered off.
I tried several times to boot the machine w/o components that could lead to short, also swapped PSU but no luck, apparently my system didn't wanted to start, neither to give energy to MOLEX but yes powering board, weird. After a hard night I decide to go to sleep and think "tomorrow it will be a better day".
So here comes the Saturday, and myself totally decided to try it once. At the last attempt, it powered on, but shortly after that, the PSU started to blink all lights again and more important, the VRMs at the top of the MB started to smoke, then to FIRE. Had to power it off but it was too late. After doing an examination and mounting some components to my spare rig ... I had to say that PSU, CPU, MoBo and 2 hard drives were dead. Luckily GPU and RAM survived.
I tried several times to boot the machine w/o components that could lead to short, also swapped PSU but no luck, apparently my system didn't wanted to start, neither to give energy to MOLEX but yes powering board, weird. After a hard night I decide to go to sleep and think "tomorrow it will be a better day".
So here comes the Saturday, and myself totally decided to try it once. At the last attempt, it powered on, but shortly after that, the PSU started to blink all lights again and more important, the VRMs at the top of the MB started to smoke, then to FIRE. Had to power it off but it was too late. After doing an examination and mounting some components to my spare rig ... I had to say that PSU, CPU, MoBo and 2 hard drives were dead. Luckily GPU and RAM survived.
Nevertheless, this build was going to be called "The Phoenix" from the very first moment, and now it really came to a reason, it had to rebirth from its ashes, more powerful and ready for the future, so I went to the store and purchased a Core i7 4790K and a MSI Z97 Gaming 7, they had to gather the family.
Family Picture

There's no time for surrender, and I will mount the same way as planned ... and here's its complete execution with some kind of cable management

The Phoenix Internals


The Phoenix Full View


Bonus Picture

Hope you liked it, I know I didn't mod yet nothing ... but after the story I had, I will wait before touching anything

Kudos to all and thanks for watching and reading


PS: Some final words to thank @Knoxx29 and @CAPSLOCKSTUCK for moral support in the whole story!!! Also a big thanks to all the people that keeps posting in the thread "YOUR PC ATM" and continues to give ideas and inspiration to all of us, keep up the good work in old TPU style
