Pro/Forums

Pro/Forums (http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/index.php)
-   General Liquid/Water Cooling Discussion (http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   My cooling towers(pics), not finished. (http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/showthread.php?t=10723)

JamesAvery22 02-03-2005 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPyro
James-

Thanks for the pictures and the additional information about the problems with flow with the single 1048 pump!!! I'm checking the diagrams now, and it seems that given a 12" tower and the MCW6000 (I think its that block) you only have about 1ft of head reamaining to achive 1gpm of flow, which isn't really enough to travel the tubes as configured. That gives me some "real world" knowledge to make estimations as to my configuration (as this will be my first WC configuration).

I'm settling on a configuration using a 18" dual pass transmission cooler (I just have to review my old fluids textbook) with a DangerDen DDC (Swiftech 350)pump and DangerDen TDX block. I think i have convinced myself that the dual pass coolers have a center partition, because the company makes them up to 30" in dual pass configuration. Given the viscosity of oil, over 90% of the cooler wouldn't be used for cooling the oil if it didn't have some kind of partition. I did find one place that I could get an dual pass anodized version (up to 30"), but at $160 for the $24" version, I think I'll have to live with the ebay 18" raw alum. version and just take care about the additatives.

Cheers
-DrPyro


I dunno about the partition man, Id see if a ebay seller that has em wouldnt mind taking a really close pic of the insides to be sure. Don't forget we are cooling water thats like 5c over ambient. They are made to cool oil thats MUCH hotter. I mean traditional transmission coolers are like a pipe in design and nothing more. A pipe with fins is just crazy :D

and uh (psst) just dont tell anyone else :D Or better yet if you want a 24" for 60$ delivered right NOW.

Id rather have a single pass even with the line going from the top all the way to the bottom. Would be much much easier to bleed.

DrPyro 02-03-2005 07:00 PM

Butcher- I realize that overall height in a closed system is (almost) irrelevant. However, just for a back of the napkin calculation of the pressure drop associated with using the transmission cooler, in order to achieve a rough estimate for the sizing of the pump, I assumed the pressure drop was directly related to the pumping height. Granted I didn't covey this level of detail in the earlier post, but there is extremely limited (aka nearly non-existent) information associated with the pressure drops with these coolers that some approximations are necessary. But thanks for pointing that detail out.....


James- Yeah, I realize that bleeding the system will be very hard with a dual pass system and i keep going back and forth between dual 18" or single 24" or 30". It is just a matter of optimization....damn engineer in me... I have been eyeing the 24" as it is nearly the optimum size to attach to my HT Rack.where there is some air circulation.....


Cheers!
-DrPyro

DrPyro 02-27-2005 07:39 PM

4 Attachment(s)
To dig up an older thread....

I have also finished my passive watercooling setup. I'm running an AMD64 3000+ in a Shuttle SN85G4. Its a very simple watercooling setup with the primary purpose of quieting the computer (I don't overclock, nor do I plan on it). The pump is a Swiftech MCP350 with a Swiftech 6000 waterblock. I got a single pass 24" transmission cooler from ebay for $50 shipped. I will have some problems with galvanic corrosion, as the block is Cu and the raditator is Al, but to minimize the effect, i used a mixture of WaterWetter & distilled water (1:32 by volume). The CPU temperature at no load (with Cool&Quiet engaged) is 32-35C and 45C (SETI@home for 24 hours), but, my apartment is cool at 18C. I will have to see how it works passively when the apartment is much warmer in the summer. So far I'm very happy with the preformance of the system, it is very quiet (the loudest parts are still the two fans). IMHO, not a bad attempt at watercooling for the first time....

Cheers!
-DrPyro[/quote]

CoolROD 02-28-2005 12:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kobuchi
NPT is a tapered thread. It should start sloppy but tighten and eventually seize up as you screw the parts together. Normally, some thread will still be visible when the joint is done.

Yes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kobuchi
EDIT: If you really want to get the barbs off, put the joint in the freezer. Both metals will contract away from each other.

No

JamesAvery22 02-28-2005 12:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPyro
To dig up an older thread....

I have also finished my passive watercooling setup. I'm running an AMD64 3000+ in a Shuttle SN85G4. Its a very simple watercooling setup with the primary purpose of quieting the computer (I don't overclock, nor do I plan on it). The pump is a Swiftech MCP350 with a Swiftech 6000 waterblock. I got a single pass 24" transmission cooler from ebay for $50 shipped. I will have some problems with galvanic corrosion, as the block is Cu and the raditator is Al, but to minimize the effect, i used a mixture of WaterWetter & distilled water (1:32 by volume). The CPU temperature at no load (with Cool&Quiet engaged) is 32-35C and 45C (SETI@home for 24 hours), but, my apartment is cool at 18C. I will have to see how it works passively when the apartment is much warmer in the summer. So far I'm very happy with the preformance of the system, it is very quiet (the loudest parts are still the two fans). IMHO, not a bad attempt at watercooling for the first time....

Cheers!
-DrPyro

[/quote]

Thats awesome man.

Was hoping you got the dual pass cooler and I could finally find out what the heck the internal design was =)

Using a setup like these, it gets to the point where the HD and the pump are the loudest parts. before I got my projector I started to get really anal. Trying to come up with large space taking ways to silence the two. Then I found the fan in my infocus was louder than my HD or pump =\

DrPyro 02-28-2005 08:38 PM

Yeah the HD produces a fair amount of noise, but that doesn't seem to bother me much so I haven't worried about techniques to quiet it. Currently the fan I'm using (AcoustiFan) produces a fair amount of noise, not as much as the HD when seeking, but enough to be annoying.

My projector is WAY more noisy than this PC now (Sanyo Z1), I'm thinking of some methods to quiet it down that look good and are not complicated.

JamesAvery22 03-01-2005 12:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPyro
Yeah the HD produces a fair amount of noise, but that doesn't seem to bother me much so I haven't worried about techniques to quiet it. Currently the fan I'm using (AcoustiFan) produces a fair amount of noise, not as much as the HD when seeking, but enough to be annoying.

My projector is WAY more noisy than this PC now (Sanyo Z1), I'm thinking of some methods to quiet it down that look good and are not complicated.


You already head over to avsforum.com for trying to quiet down that Z1?

DrPyro 03-01-2005 09:09 PM

Yeah...I live in AVSforum for my HTPC and home theater information. I have seen several ideas on how to quiet it down, however, i'm not thrilled about the idea of a hush box. I also have alot of hours on this bulb, so I'm more or less waiting for it to die so I can replace it with something higher resolution and quieter.....


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:20 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
(C) 2005 ProCooling.com
If we in some way offend you, insult you or your people, screw your mom, beat up your dad, or poop on your porch... we're sorry... we were probably really drunk...
Oh and dont steal our content bitches! Don't give us a reason to pee in your open car window this summer...