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Joe
10-28-2005, 09:38 AM
Since I am just not getting the time I need to get the site work done. I just wanted to ask a simple question incase I am using the free time I have wrong in how I am going about the site.

Is ProCooling no longer a website? Just a forum? Should ProCooling be transformed into a hybrid forum/site with the forum being center stage and really just forget about formalized reviews/articles?

Turn ProCooling into a focused discussion board for high end cooling topics?

I think the chance that ProCooling will become active with reviews/articles like it was 3 years ago, is unlikely.

Also going to a more Forum centric site and community would make my life a lil easier ;)

Input?

Cyco-Dude
10-28-2005, 09:52 AM
well i don't think you should forget formal reviews / articles altogether. they might not come as frequently as in the past, but i'd still read them. a current waterblock, HSF (VGA HSF?) or radiator review here and now would be good, as would the occasional project that you keep talking about doing :D

i think you're on the right track with the forums taking a larger role of the site with user blogs / reviews / etc.

BillA
10-28-2005, 10:29 AM
got to match resources with expectations

where are the articles going to come from ?
we have set the bar so high that 'professional quality' technical assessment and analysis is assumed
yet only a handful of individuals (and some silent companies) have this capability, and only pH contributes to procooling
procooling rode for several years on pH's back, I cannot imagine the hours he spent (untrue, I know well)
-> where are new technical articles/reviews to come from ?

is it understood that repeated accusations of bias will inhibit the release of data by others ? (sales wins over engn)
the technical people will remain because we have nothing better, outside inputs are always needed so a closed forum is about worthless

carry on Joe, you are too far outside the mainstream for 'popularity'

as an aside, what is being 'lost' is interesting:
a considerable bit of head scratching is going on regarding the assumptions made in the characterizing of components and systems
little of this will be summarized as it is known to the participants - to whom it is of interest
a shame Ben does not wish to do his codifying within procooling

maxSaleen
10-28-2005, 06:34 PM
I have an idea, though I don't know if it is feasible.

Making the forums viewable/usable via the Blazer browser would allow those who are always on the go to participate more actively in the forums. I know I would. Plus it would be a first for the PC world (extremesystems on your handheld, anyone?)

I think reviews are still important. It seems that the difficult part is in getting samples. Expanding to air cooling would give the site a larger base for content. Compare the number of air HSFs to liquid HSs released annually. It's not even close.

jaydee
10-28-2005, 06:37 PM
I am not against the informal forum concept. My testing is getting better but I still can't write for shit. Much rather have a work log forum that I can just post what I am doing. People sending us review samples are the main concern I have. Would a forum thread about the product be to their satisfaction or would they expect a actual article? Or do we care?

jaydee
10-28-2005, 06:40 PM
Expanding to air cooling would give the site a larger base for content. Compare the number of air HSFs to liquid HSs released annually. It's not even close.
Not a bad idea but who here has the time? We all have real full time jobs. hard enough doing what we can as it is.

Breach
10-28-2005, 10:07 PM
The one thing ive noticed about site like this one, is that without fresh front page content to get people to the site, new or old, the site fades out. I think procooling has vast potential as the only true extreme cooling forum where experts like Cathar (and others) are really involved. But there is deffinatly a lack of new reviews and articles. With a fresh face and new content I think procooling coud come alive as the difinitive source for what pro is all about.

Granted, most of us do all have real world jobs, time is always an issue. It will take either people with extreme detication to the sites growth, or find a way to make procooling your job.

In the end I would say just getting some fresh content would be a good start, bring new people to the site.

jaydee
10-28-2005, 10:35 PM
I wonder what peoples idea of extreme cooling is? I have seen that phrase used toward ProCooling twice today. I personally have seen hardly any completed and not very many incompleted "extreme" cooling things done here.

IMO water cooling is far from extreme. Water cooling has been used since the beginning of time (sweat!). Hardly extreme.

IMO extreme is TEC, phase change, liquid NO2 and what not... Don't see that here hardly at all.

I would have thought ProCooling meant "professional grade cooling techniques". Not only extreme but also air, water and whatever else works.

Not sure what Joe originally used the ProCooling name for.

As for content what would you suggest?

jaydee
10-30-2005, 08:36 PM
I would suggest finding your staff and creating a staff discussion forum. Get an idea of what they are going to focus on and make their work easily viewable on the front page. Maybe a more in depth version of the view threads script you have now. Possible one block for each staff members work log. Their work logs can possible take place of articles and reviews.


Shame there isn't more input in this thread?

Joe
10-30-2005, 10:34 PM
We have a staff? holy shit when did this happen?

we do have a staff forum, just no one in it.

jaydee
10-30-2005, 10:40 PM
We have a staff? holy shit when did this happen?

we do have a staff forum, just no one in it.
lol,

I was talking more of who you asked to join the staff for the site redesign. As far as I know nothing more has happed there.

Joe
10-30-2005, 10:42 PM
well the lack of time, or drive to take time away from other areas of interest, really makes me not want to dive in hard to get people to help out if I cant promise that I will have time to pay attention. We have lost pH to WoW also, so theres really no one at the helm currently.

I work on stuff here and there, and hopefully now that winters coming I will have some free time.

jaydee
10-30-2005, 11:04 PM
well the lack of time, or drive to take time away from other areas of interest, really makes me not want to dive in hard to get people to help out if I cant promise that I will have time to pay attention. We have lost pH to WoW also, so theres really no one at the helm currently.

I work on stuff here and there, and hopefully now that winters coming I will have some free time.
I hear you there. That is about the only thing I look forward to in winter is having more time on other things.

pHaestus
10-31-2005, 01:54 PM
I should chime in.

I am currently a victim of my own pickiness. Can't get dP xmitter to work and don't have the $$ to get one Swiftech offered to donate calibrated atm. Without the dP measurements to be truthful Procooling reviews would be incomplete and inferior to stuff that's being published elsewhere (why bother then?)

This happened before I got serious about testing last time too. Then I just decided to go with what I had and do my best and I think it did ok. But don't our readers actually expect MORE than the test methods that were used for SocketA wbs?

Joe
10-31-2005, 02:55 PM
What would it cost to get the dP xmitter up and running?

I mean maybe PC could take donations to get your rig running if the promise is that there are reviews/articles and contenty goodness.

ricecrispi
10-31-2005, 03:44 PM
so jaydee needs some writing skills
pH needs dP xmitter (sounds kinky)
Joe needs an an extreme makeover (for his website of course)

All we need is a tornado, red shoes, flying monkeys, and a quentin tarantino remake of the wizard of oz. Anyone want to be the lead?
-----------------------------------
The site needs new articles and several people can contribute so the burden is not on pH alone. Procooling.com greatest assest is has a large number of big WCing players that are active members.
It seems many have rested their laurels and believed Wcing has reached an apex. I think there is lots to ground to cover. WCing is always changing and evolving.

Repeated test data wouldn't hurt either. We can have test data from several testers. It would help solve the problem of comparing results from different benches. We just group one set of bench test data and if onyone has conflicting data they can go back and retest or have a famous procooling flaming contest.

We still need testing to be done on vidcard waterblocks, on new rads, and
chipsets waterblocks.

Testing data will allow expansion on the interactive wb performance chart by add rad, pump, vidcard and chipset wb variables. People can come to see how certain setups will perform instead of eyeballing and guesstimation. You can advertise on this page like crazy for several vendors and not just Wcing vendors!

You can cover individual products then round them up for a big blow out comparative articles. You can do all the testing in one short span but spread out the releases of articles. Spreading out the reviews so people wanting more and come back for more. It's like getting a girl that gives it all on the first night. Do you come back for more once you got all you can get out of her? Why would you?

It's nice we got reviews on individual parts but what about covering whole kits. Have can have reviews on WCing kits. Dtek vs dangerden vs swiftech vs silverprop vs. european market stuff.

What about trying to get some european products to compare? It was nice to see the nexxos xp block. We need some international flavor. Procooling has many member across the globe. Try catering to them and not only the US based and english speaking based members.

Add links to frontpage to articles related to computer cooling and product reviews from othersites. Helps broaden focus on other types of cooling and future possiblities in cooling. Might make friends with other sites too. Also gives us firestarter material for famous flaming wars at procooling.

Add more project worklogs. coolmiester and mashie have posted worklogs and it would be great to get some dIY case modding tips and articles even if it's been done before.

The forum is active so no problem but some topics lack traffic and i think groups some of them together might help.

The forum is working but the front page needs work and we sorely needs testing data.

BTW. We need a flaming war notice on the frontpage or forum so we don't miss a good match

jaydee
10-31-2005, 07:55 PM
I should chime in.

I am currently a victim of my own pickiness. Can't get dP xmitter to work and don't have the $$ to get one Swiftech offered to donate calibrated atm. Without the dP measurements to be truthful Procooling reviews would be incomplete and inferior to stuff that's being published elsewhere (why bother then?)

This happened before I got serious about testing last time too. Then I just decided to go with what I had and do my best and I think it did ok. But don't our readers actually expect MORE than the test methods that were used for SocketA wbs?
This is why I havn't made any official test results either. I just bought a brand new Foxboro 823DP xmitter calibrated to 400" H2O or roughly 14.5PSI. However I need a DMM or something to take a reading.... I am well out of cash at the moment for such. Also need to make a new die sim.....

In the mean time I have a system build to do and parts should be here this week. Will post a thread on it when start on it.

bigben2k
10-31-2005, 08:28 PM
Maybe this would provide some insight:
http://overclockers.com/articles1271/index02.asp

Joe
10-31-2005, 09:58 PM
Well in a turn of weird events (not quite tot he flying monkeys level) I did some hack work on the site again tonight. like 1" closer and still 10 miles away. What I need to do is just sit down, uninterupted, and hammer on this shit for like a week. But that doesnt happen. Once I get started on something its either time for bed so I can go to work in the AM, or I am heading out the door, or friends are over... etc...

The new site will be nice, but there is a SHITLOAD of work that goes into getting 5 years of legacy data into a new site, new format, new structure.

That and I am a perfectionist, and I am not going to post the site until its done. And its not nearly to that point for me yet.

Investor
10-31-2005, 10:22 PM
Sounds like a job for VC... (venture c-a-p-i-t-a-l) I am always drikn// drunk

HAL-9000
11-01-2005, 11:20 AM
Hey folks, I haven't posted here in awhile and so much has changed.

Anyways, I would like to see some evolution of Procooling, if for nothing else then to keep the current community going. I sat around here (at work no less) thinking about something to do, but really there isn't much you can do to differentiate procooling from the myriad fan-boy cooling sites. As far as articles and testing go, we could test the same waterblock everyone else tests, perhaps always better, or test HSF's, which would be very, very hard to develop a reliable methodology/test bench for.

I was thinking perhaps we could explore in our work logs the less glamorous but still meddlesome issues that plague performance cooling (using any technique, water, air..etc.). For instance, everyone in watercooling land is always complaining about mystery evaporation, gunk magically appearing in the lines...etc. Yet no one has ever explored the "why" of this occuring on any site, much less how to reliably remedy it...which is something any watercooler would be curious in.

There are more issues out there like that, that's just one example. If we did articles/worklogs on things like that, it both eliminates the need for test samples (explore problems that are universal) and is something that no other site seems to care about. Just a thought.

9mmCensor
11-04-2005, 08:13 PM
wasn't the plan to turn it into a porn site?

k|ngp|n
11-28-2005, 01:17 PM
Great site you guys have here. I am a regular over at xtremesystems.org, but I browse here ocasionally. Ever think of having an ln2/dryice specific forum?

Joe
11-28-2005, 01:40 PM
9mm - That is plan B :)

K|ngp|n I replied to your email and yes I think we should get a forum for that setup. I mean how can web be procooling without the extreme side covered? :D

Joe
11-28-2005, 01:49 PM
http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/forumdisplay.php?f=78

there you go, the Xtreme Cooling Forums is here :)

k|ngp|n
11-28-2005, 04:00 PM
Cool deal man!

resago
02-14-2006, 10:39 AM
my 2cents
free case of beer to new members.
OR procooling branded beer and energy drink

I see we have google ads, but they link to sears and stuff.
see if there are any good affiliate programs that are cooling related at cj.com
even if it was a few links to buy.com for HSF, it would be good revenue for the site.

Joe
02-14-2006, 10:45 AM
Funny enough the Google ad's bring in more revenue than the site has ever had before! we are actually running a bit above our operating costs now! (IN THE BLACK BABY!)

and yeh as we go I am looking at more sponsor options. To be honest I am strapped for time right now. I am working 1 full time job, 1 part time job, and helping start another company. So stuff is going to move at the pace of what I can put into it. Until we get more writers, theres no reason for me to go and get more sponsors.

You all need to email phaestus@procooling.com and badger that guy to get over that stupid WoW thing already ;)

resago
02-14-2006, 11:06 AM
yeah, I know about adsense. I've started a site of my own called labor finder.
Its like the moster.com for the average joe without a huge resume.
I'll not post the link, but its in my sig for anyone interested.
adsense makes back about 1/2 of what I spend on adwords.
I'm trying to offset the rest by using links from cj.

jaydee
02-21-2006, 10:41 PM
Seems to me we are all to concerned with temps when testing cooling products. I am losing focus on why temps are such a big concern. Sure the cooling system is supposed to cool your system and finding out which one cool better has been the focus all this time...... But why?

Why don't we base our opinions on how well a computer performs with the cooling system as opposed to what a temp probe tells us? In this day and age it would be hard to find a cooler that simply did not work to the point your system will not work under normal conditions with a stock system. If the plain all aluminum heat sink and fan that comes stock with the CPU works fine then I can't see how even cheap after market cooler wouldn't work.


So I guess my question is why not just do simple performance tests with cooling products for reviews instead of highly technical orientated reviews that most don't understand and the results are, in reality, not all that useful for most if any in the end?

Run normal computer tasks to games and then maybe CPU Burn and other benchmarks. Overclock and then repeat.

Base performance on noise, ease of install, looks, construction, cost and over all usability.

It just seems to me temps are not as relevant anymore. The 3 comps I got setup now I haven't even checked the temps and honestly don't care until I have to.


I think these reviews would be easier for staff and more useful for the end user.

And speaking of end users we could setup a data base of user reviews of product parts and even service from the company.

If someone still wants to try and figure out the thermal capacity and performance of a cooler on what ever test bed they choose then fine to. I just don't see it useful or relevant to most.

jaydee
02-22-2006, 07:54 PM
2 current examples suffice:
http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/showpost.php?p=154892&postcount=30 - here we have a long-term poster who does not have a clue, and no one has corrected him


Including yourself. :hammer: I would love to hear how a CPU temp measurment is more important than the computers performance. After all why do we have computers? For the majority of the world it isn't to see how cold we can get the CPU. The temp of the CPU dosn't concern me if the system is stable and does everything I want it to.

If water block A can get me an overclock of 200mhz and water block B can get me an overclock of 150mhz but block A is $20 more expensive then why bother with block A?


If water cooling system A keeps my comp quiet and running stable and fast but water cooling system B keeps the system running stable and fast but is louder and they are close to the same price then why bother with system B?

After all my testing ventres and piles of useless data I can pretty much confirm there is no reason for such highly technical testing. My computer runs the same...

gmat
02-23-2006, 02:30 AM
You're right on one point, most people content themselves with a "running computer".
But we're in the hardcore fringe of community. It's by pushing the things to their limit that we make progress. Emergence of new designs, or refinement of others, are the result. Think car racing, it serves no purpose really (entertainment set aside) but the fallout from racing is more refined engineering techniques, better engines for everyone, etc... Maybe the comparison is a bit stretched by you see my point, or i hope so.
(edit) oh snap, someone made a better answer than me here:
http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/showthread.php?p=154970#post154970

pHaestus
02-23-2006, 11:34 AM
You are like a bipolar person jaydee, but you flip-flop from the "good enough" to "get it right" crowd instead. Why monitor temperatures? Cooling performance is evaluated by measuring temperatures and properly analyzing their meaning. Why to bother?

Ok let's assume (here's a big one) that commercial water cooling systems are engineered and optimized to perform as well as possible at a given price point given typical space/mounting limitations. In other words that the commercial mfgrs know what they are doing. OK operate on that assumption and decide you want to build a DIY cooling loop to save money and have more fun.

Given say half the budget of the commercial kit, would you want that DIY loop to perform 50%, 75%, or 90% as well as that totally optimized commercial system? The way you improve performance is by matching components, and one cannot do that without reliable test results. That is the value of properly conducted testing in my eyes.

jaydee
02-23-2006, 08:11 PM
You are like a bipolar person jaydee, but you flip-flop from the "good enough" to "get it right" crowd instead. Why monitor temperatures? Cooling performance is evaluated by measuring temperatures and properly analyzing their meaning. Why to bother?
Bipolar, that is a considerable mental problem? Anyway not nearly as bad as Bill changing from die sims to CPU test benches pretty rapidly. What is right though? No one here is capable of such obviously. We have to settle for good enough. The last 6 years here has more than proven that as we are no were closer to the answer of what is "getting it right". From your level of testing and the standard run of the mill testing the order of performance is still pretty much the same.

Ok let's assume (here's a big one) that commercial water cooling systems are engineered and optimized to perform as well as possible at a given price point given typical space/mounting limitations. In other words that the commercial mfgrs know what they are doing. OK operate on that assumption and decide you want to build a DIY cooling loop to save money and have more fun.
I am going to assume you mean DIY as combining commercial products to make a loop as opposed to real DIY loop in constructing the entire loop yourself from parts you built. Anyway the tests I described will easily tell how well each work. If computer performance is degraded in any way then you have your answer.


Given say half the budget of the commercial kit, would you want that DIY loop to perform 50%, 75%, or 90% as well as that totally optimized commercial system? The way you improve performance is by matching components, and one cannot do that without reliable test results. That is the value of properly conducted testing in my eyes.
But is that 50%, 75% or 90% actually benifiting the computer or your performance goals such as noise ect...? If not the question is meaningless. As said with the tests based on computer performance you will come up with IMO better answers. Instead of results based of temps they are based on actual computer performance. If the coolng system has a 75% better cooling capacity than another but the computer performance is unchanged then who cares? By the time CPU's get hot enough to were that 75% might be benificial you will have to buy a new water block at least anyway because the mounting system will probably change.

gmat mentioned cars. Lets use that for example. How are cars tested for the average end user? They are run through performance tests on a track (like overclocking and using CPU burn on a comp) and in actual driving conditions (like playing games or running vid editiong software on a comp).

How can you base the performance of a cooling kit over the performance of the complete computer system? Is the cooling system not just a part of the computer system? Why should we base performance on the capability of the cooling system as opposed to how well the cooling system actual benifits the computer?

Back to cars... After market parts are not rated on what the part is capable of but what it is capable of on the car it is designed for. Only way to find out how well that part really works is to use it on the car and see what performance increase it gives the car.

You can run all the tests you want on that part alone but in the end its real value comes with what performance gain it adds to the product it is attached to and that is the information most of the readers of reviews are looking for IMO.

More technical data can be useful for product designers but how many of those are here anymore? and what percentage of them are capable of finding the restults on their own?

gmat
02-24-2006, 04:15 AM
The problem is about the same for car performance parts. Let's say i want a header for my engine. There are reviews, dynos and so on. But this header will give huge gains with high lift cams, and almost no gains (or losses) with stock cams.
It all comes back to what we've always said: think about the whole system, not individual parts. Still, testing each individual part to see how it performs under controlled circumstances, is very important, to engineer the whole system in a coherent manner. Back to my header. If i take it, it means i'm upgrading the cams, putting a decent intake, and sizing the exhaust properly. I wont focus on the individual gains of the header, since i know that will ALL parts sized properly the whole setup will do what i want (like, +25 whp for example in my case).
The same goes for computer "aftermarket" parts: each must be tested in all circumstances to see how they fit into a whole system. And which complete system produces "good" results. By "good" in our case it will mean higher OC, and less noise (maybe define a noise vs OC ratio ? in dBA per % of OC, no real unit i know ?)

Brians256
02-24-2006, 11:27 AM
Exactly. If I might paraphrase you, gmat, test each part so that you know the items to use in a system "design".

I was going to say more, but it's just a rehash of stuff I've said already.

jaydee
02-24-2006, 12:18 PM
The problem is about the same for car performance parts. Let's say i want a header for my engine. There are reviews, dynos and so on. But this header will give huge gains with high lift cams, and almost no gains (or losses) with stock cams.
It all comes back to what we've always said: think about the whole system, not individual parts. Still, testing each individual part to see how it performs under controlled circumstances, is very important, to engineer the whole system in a coherent manner. Back to my header. If i take it, it means i'm upgrading the cams, putting a decent intake, and sizing the exhaust properly. I wont focus on the individual gains of the header, since i know that will ALL parts sized properly the whole setup will do what i want (like, +25 whp for example in my case).
The same goes for computer "aftermarket" parts: each must be tested in all circumstances to see how they fit into a whole system. And which complete system produces "good" results. By "good" in our case it will mean higher OC, and less noise (maybe define a noise vs OC ratio ? in dBA per % of OC, no real unit i know ?)
I am not seeing how this is any different then what I am suggesting. Only difference is I am taking the main focus off temps and placing it on performance.

There are only 3 main parts to a water cooling system for a PC. Pump, rad and water block (or multiples of each). It has been pretty well proven replacing any one of those parts and swapping in another is not going to drastically change things and if it does my tests will prove it anyway.

Your head example doesn't fit the bill in this day and age. You can gain huge amounts of performance from changing parts on a head. Changing from a Apogee to Strom Rev. 2 will get you hardly anything. Changing from a BI to a BIX will hardly gain you anything. Changing from a Ehime 1260 to a MD30 with hardly gain you anything..... Changing all 3 will hardly gain you anything. Temp wise that is. So why focus on temps instead of over all performance, noise, looks and over all ease of use?

You can interchange all the modern water cooling parts you want in any order you want and you will be hard pressed to notice any significant changes in computer performance.

Also how is testing each part on a test bench not designed for what the part was made for telling us how that part will work on the thing it was made for? Also how is testing these parts on a Intel 775 CPU that no one uses going to tell us any different?

We can test how ever we want but the end results are not going to be consistent for every type of comp out there. The temp difference from one cooling system to another is hardly relevant over noise and ease of use these days.

From en engineering stand point I can certainly understand the higher level of testing and that is the standpoint I have had the last few years. Now I don't really care about that and looking at it from and end users perspective. I don't really care about all the tech stuff, just want to know if the cooling system is reliable, quiet and cost effective. Not concerned about 1-6C temp difference. Just doesn't matter in reality. Games still play the same, internet is just as fast and my OC will hardly matter with that small temp swing.

Back in the day it was a lot more important. When you could take a Duron 600 and OC it to 1100mhz. That was a useful overclock! Today you can add 1000mhz to a 2000mhz CPU to get 3000mhz and it is hardly noticeable. And you can do it with air cooling. Water cooling might add a 100mhz or so but what does it matter? Only to the uber geeks that have nothing better to have a dick size contest about.


Just seems some of us take testing way to seriously. Certainly has not done anyone any good here lately.

pHaestus
02-24-2006, 05:06 PM
So what is your point exactly?

That this hobby no longer interests you? I fail to see how one reviews in a way that gets around that sticking point.

bigben2k
02-24-2006, 05:51 PM
No, his point is that the way that testing is done (i.e. with a heater) doesn't necessarily reflect the processor. Even Bill's admitted that a Storm type design can perform in a way that a heater test might not be able to reflect.

There's a gap gents, and we're not addressing it.

I've given some thought (on spare brain power) about slicing up the heat die surface in a grid, then trying to figure out if there's any way to heat each pin individually, but I haven't come to any kind of idea.

The IHS throws another curve into the equation, since it effectively smooths things out, to some? extent.

Maybe there's a way to create a whole new type of (Incoherent style) flux block?

I'm too busy to define the parameters; someone else please take this.

jaydee
02-24-2006, 08:00 PM
On the right track Ben. I just can't understand why it is such a ridiculous idea to do the testing in a real world situation and environment. Why are temps so important when the difference between the top 6 water blocks is less than 6C? We have proven how hard it is to accurately get valid and accurate temps on a CPU based system. I am also suggesting it is not really necessary to do so in the first place. If the computer systems performance is unnoticeably changed with a 6C + temp change then why put all the emphasis on temps as opposed to noise, ease of use and over all appearance?

Why pH is acting like Bill I am not sure. His response is odd. Can't answer the questions or refuses to or thinks the questions are to low class to bother with and then attack the poster. Sounds oddly familiar.


Anyway Joe, good luck man. I tried to suggest a method that would give usable results and will not take such a load of cash and high learning curve to do so maybe someone would do something here but I forget we are to holy for such. Could simply add to the review temp measurements are on board and not to be taken to seriously and all major performance data is based on computer performance and not temps. At least you could get some content going and if nothing else let people know how well the products looks, sounds and how easy it instals. Lots of people would prefer ease of use and looks over a couple extra C cooler. But whatever.

jaydee
02-26-2006, 07:17 PM
After all my testing ventres and piles of useless data I can pretty much confirm there is no reason for such highly technical testing. My computer runs the same...
I didn't word this to well. Maybe that is why pH replied as he did. I was speaking for myself when I said that and not anyone else who does highly technical testing. Every tester has a reason to test as they do. It just seems to me we could add a different angle to the content here that is not as technical and more user friendly.

I think people would like to see parts on a comp and running not only to see what the computer system can do with the cooling system but to see how it was put together.

Anyway just a little carification (maybe more so for myself). :hammer:

bigben2k
02-26-2006, 07:47 PM
You know, the funny thing is that if we were testing HSF, the test setup would look a lot more like a PC (heater mounted in a typical case, to replicate the ambient temp, see frostytech article, or Intel specs).

Water cooling on the other hand doesn't depend on the ambient temperature inside the case.

BillA
02-26-2006, 07:57 PM
ahem, think environmental chamber
come on Ben, a case is still used in a chamber to replicate the in-case air flow path
(why mine is that odd shape, eh ?)
the Intel spec has a plate on top (the case side) and is hell on recirculation, most vexing

bigben2k
02-26-2006, 08:22 PM
Yes, but about water cooling testing; "we don't need no stinkin' case" (just a water chiller). (Radiator testing aside).

BillA
02-26-2006, 10:13 PM
when I tested WCing systems it was in a case, why not ?
get as real as possible, no big deal

jaydee
02-26-2006, 10:26 PM
when I tested WCing systems it was in a case, why not ?
get as real as possible, no big deal
come on Ben, a case is still used in a chamber to replicate the in-case air flow path

I completly agree.

gmat
02-27-2006, 03:55 AM
Yes, you have to consider secondary heat paths, and in case temps are relevant for this i think.