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General Liquid/Water Cooling Discussion For discussion about Full Cooling System kits, or general cooling topics. Keep specific cooling items like pumps, radiators, etc... in their specific forums. |
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#1 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: al
Posts: 21
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just as the title says...... one way I could do it is by making my reservoir with one of those camping coolers and adding ice, but I want to make something thats automatic, any ideas?
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#2 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Oxford University, UK
Posts: 452
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Unless you're prepared to spend a huge amount of money on power supplies and electricity bills, you won't see good results with anything peltier based.
Those camping coolers/icemakers are ONLY designed to cool a couple of beers or whatever, not something which is constantly generating heat. They usually run with a 50W peltier, which is the maximum heat it will move, and that will be with the cold side at the same temp as the hot side. Your average cpu kicks out around 70W, plus heat from the pump and any other components you plan to cool. If you really want to have sub ambient water, you either need a bong cooler, or phase change. Do a search for phase change or bong 8-ball
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For those who believe that water needs to travel slowly through the radiator for optimum performance, read the following thread. READ ALL OF THIS!!!! |
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#3 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Oxford University, UK
Posts: 452
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Oh, and welcome to the forums.
8-ball
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For those who believe that water needs to travel slowly through the radiator for optimum performance, read the following thread. READ ALL OF THIS!!!! |
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#4 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Malta
Posts: 495
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Here is our project using evaporative cooling towers (bongs)
Here is rotor's tutorial of how to make a chiller from a dehumidifier
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So the bullet proof vest aint a $hit when d laser is pointed to your head Kid |
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#5 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Dione, sector 4s1256
Posts: 852
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Welcome here!
Cheap Chillers. Yes, possible, indeed..... but not advisable. The mear fact that you are at a stage where you are looking into Chiller possibilities, puts you on a performance level comparable to that of doing Land-speed-record preparations for next season. that is where "CHEAP" equates to knocking off 1 layer of carbon fibre from the rear suction duct. just to save a couple of thousand dollars on a 200K project. this is where cheap becomes dangeorous. now that I've said that, ignore it... ![]()
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There is no Spoon.... |
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#6 |
Been /.'d... have you?
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Moscow, ID
Posts: 1,986
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Unless you are considering phase change cooling which is by and large big, ugly, and dangerous to the uninitiated (arr, me bones'r meltin' arr ... ), look up direct peltier cooling. This can be reasonably affordable if added to a preexisting watercooling kit. Otherwise, consider going with a prometia system. At $450 at some places, it is perfectly acceptable considering that creating a good watercooling system with pelts will run you upwards of $250 if you go cheap and used. For the performance difference it is worth it.
As for adding a pelt, you just need to consider whether your system can handle the extra heat load, make sure you have a capable independent power supply, and a block that can be rigged to hold one ... plus the insulation and such involved. Using a chiller involves some insulation if you are going more than a few degs under ambient, a costly part (a good dehumidifier or such that will work costs upwards of $100 typically), and a good deal of modification to make it work. Ask yourself these q's before you get started: what are your goals, how much are you willing to spend, and how many risks are you willing to take? Once you've answered those, study your options, narrow them down, and study some more. Don't undertake a project until you are confident that you can handle anything thrown at you, or in these circumstances you are setting yourself up for disaster.
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#!/bin/sh {who;} {last;} {pause;} {grep;} {touch;} {unzip;} mount /dev/girl -t {wet;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} echo yes yes yes {yes;} umount {/dev/girl;zip;} rm -rf {wet.spot;} {sleep;} finger: permission denied |
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#7 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Sweden, Skovde
Posts: 101
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I know a Peltierchiller is not very economic... But I'm going to try build one that chills the water when i'm not Idle but are playing and stuff... (If the rad can't take all the heat)
I'm going to use this to transfer the heat away from the hotside of the peltier... http://w1.500.telia.com/~u50014558/BigHeatspreader/ Nice huh?? ![]() Actually I've got three of these babies... Planning on selling one of them... Maybe in exchange for a grafixcard or something (I have only an old GF 256 now ![]() |
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