Go Back   Pro/Forums > ProCooling Technical Discussions > General Liquid/Water Cooling Discussion
Password
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Chat

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.

Reply
Thread Tools
Unread 03-23-2004, 05:31 PM   #26
jlrii
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Posts: 158
Default

I was playing around with an idea similar to this a 'lil while back. But what I found....by working the numbers only (which is NOT a substitute for experimentation ala BillA) is that you make no gains from having more flow through the rad. I have yet to see if it may work the other way around, with more flow through the block (gotta change the Excell sheet I made up to calculate the balance point). The sheet calculates water temp on a pass by pass basis at the block and rad, then calculates the mixed water temp supplying the block...repeat repeat repeat....usually took about 4-500 loops to balance out. Result....well with the blocks I had detailed enough info on I got slight losses, never any gains. I'm in the process now of rebuilding my rig with components that I have enough info on to play a little more with it.
jlrii is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 12:55 AM   #27
LPorc
Cooling Neophyte
 
LPorc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 66
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ares
essentially your using a venturi design where flowing water at lower pressure sucks water from the resevior with it. pulled through by the 2nd pump, and shot through multiple radiators.
Ares, if both pumps were pulling from just the resevoir as initially presented, wouldn't any pump suction already be split among the resevoir inlets?

I'd think the mixing of the waters in a resevoir would be ok unless the resevoir was very large or the inlets were placed very poorly in relation to the outlets. If you think about the flow scenario, basically there'd be 2 pumps putting essentially 3 times the usual flow through the resevoir, so the resevoir will be nicely turbulent unless it is quite a bit larger than what seems typical.

As to comments by others, I'd think the water moving through the radiators twice as fast as the cooling loop shouldn't really make much of a difference, though. The radiator will basically shed just as much heat as delta-temp and airflow will let it, so I'd think little gain unless the radiator was already overkill for the setup, then running twice the flow through the radiator as the cooling loop would at best be less than running two radiators in series.

And here's a musing for all those who love to say that delta-tempature between coolant and ambient makes radiators more efficient, I don't see how that's possible. Here's a thought experiement of why: for a constant airflow through the radiator, a constant flow rate, and a constant ambient tempature, graph your radiator input tempatures x more than ambient, and output tempatures y more than ambient. Wouldn't (x-y)/x be the real measure of efficiency? So for the premise to be correct as x increases y approaches x, so a little postage stamp radiator could cool infinitely super-heated water to ambient in one pass.

I would suppose the best-case scenario is then that the radiator will reach a point of load where it sheds a constant (x-y), which would mean it's all about the ability of the air to remove heat from the radiator. So essentially all water cooling accomplishes is moving the heat from the cooling blocks to a big heatsink (the radiator).
LPorc is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 03:52 AM   #28
lolito_fr
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: France
Posts: 291
Default

This might be slightly OT...

Its an idea I had based on my limited experience of water cooling, where two pumps might be quite useful.
In this case, one pump is driving the "main" cooling loop (CPU, GPU, rad), and the second smaller pump would drive a "secondary" low flow circuit to cool lower power components such as hard drives, northbridge, mosfets, PSU...

The main loop would be 1/2" or 3/8".
The second loop could use 1/4", which has the advantage of being that much more flexible

Excuse the lame paint hack of your wonderful diagram
Attached Images
File Type: gif Dual loop.gif (26.8 KB, 36 views)
lolito_fr is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 11:44 AM   #29
jlrii
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Posts: 158
Default

As to comments by others, I'd think the water moving through the radiators twice as fast as the cooling loop shouldn't really make much of a difference, though. The radiator will basically shed just as much heat as delta-temp and airflow will let it, so I'd think little gain unless the radiator was already overkill for the setup, then running twice the flow through the radiator as the cooling loop would at best be less than running two radiators in series.


While i'm not sure if Foxgguy wants to do this for the same reasons I can say why I thought it might work b4 playing with the numbers. It is not the added flow through the rads I thought would add some performance, it was the added PASSES through the radiator. Granted added flow thru a a rad produces practically no change in it's C/W. But what happens if the water makes 2 passes through the rad for every one through the block? Will "re-coolling" ,if you will, the water in the loop add any additional performance? As far as I can tell at this point that answer would be no. I was picturing that added passes through the rad would act like having a second rad of about 1/2 the size of the original in series with the first...which it does. But the gains there appear to be outweighed by the gain in C/W at the block that could be made by having all of the flow go through it. This outcome was based on calcs alone and is not by any means proven with experimentation. What I am working on now is rebuilding my system with components that have known C/W
and flow curves curves to test it for real. The way I am going to set it up will allow me to alter the flow rates through the rad or block which will allow me to see if any gains are available from this method or it's inverse (allowng the block to recieve more flow than the rad). Intuition alone tells me that aproach probably won't present gains either.... I will do some calcs b4 I complete the project to estimate what may happen. Why bother doing it?......just fun to play with ...thats all.
jlrii is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 12:03 PM   #30
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

if you guys used some data (and there is enough 'real data' out there to be able to gin up some bogus values for calcs)
and calculated the Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD) of your rads (air side also)
the efficacy and cost/benefit ratio of your different scenarios can be easily evaluated

but then there would be no 'discussion' I guess
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 12:12 PM   #31
jlrii
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Posts: 158
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by unregistered
if you guys used some data (and there is enough 'real data' out there to be able to gin up some bogus values for calcs)
and calculated the Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD) of your rads (air side also)
the efficacy and cost/benefit ratio of your different scenarios can be easily evaluated

but then there would be no 'discussion' I guess
Hmmm......I thought I just said I did that....jees....you are grumpy LOL

EDIT: Igotta admit I took the easy way out and used AMTD...and yes it does throw the calc off somewhat.

Last edited by jlrii; 03-24-2004 at 12:36 PM.
jlrii is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 09:11 PM   #32
LPorc
Cooling Neophyte
 
LPorc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 66

Quote:
Originally Posted by unregistered
if you guys used some data (and there is enough 'real data' out there to be able to gin up some bogus values for calcs)
and calculated the Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD) of your rads (air side also)
the efficacy and cost/benefit ratio of your different scenarios can be easily evaluated

but then there would be no 'discussion' I guess
Heh heh... If I knew how to do any of that, I wouldn't be lurking here trying to pick up knowledge through osmosis! I just write code and poetry, this physical sciences stuff is all new to me. Even my thought experiment is more of a philosophical argument, a thinly veiled Socratic monologue (not a dialog as nobody commented on it). Maybe I should buy a book. Any recommendations?
LPorc is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-24-2004, 09:46 PM   #33
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51
Default

i wish i could calculated "the Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD)" of all this stuff. then i wouldnt be learning this with the trial and error method. i also wouldnt be asking the questions here, id be answering them
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 08:45 AM   #34
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

google is your friend
then start looking up every word in the definition of LMTD which is not clear
a bit tougher than being spoon fed, but it works
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 09:33 AM   #35
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51
Default

baby wanna be fed

good point BillA...

i just wish i had this hobby when i was in collage (soooo many years ago) i might have payed (more) attention in math/physics class then...(note to all the young'ens out there!)

guess ill be testing the "you cant teach an old dog new tricks" theory next
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 11:05 AM   #36
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

lol, little sympathy here Joe,
I'm 58 and 4 years ago had never heard of WCing a computer;
all depends on the extent of one's interest
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 01:46 PM   #37
myv65
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: home
Posts: 365
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by unregistered
lol, little sympathy here Joe,
I'm 58 and 4 years ago had never heard of WCing a computer;
all depends on the extent of one's interest
You're not often blatantly wrong Bill, but this time you are. If it all depended purely on one's interest, Ben would be king of the watercoolers. Much like you need a good pump, block, and radiator to create a good system (as opposed to one item being crap and trashing the entire thing), it takes both interest and ability. A good engineering education can serve as an immense leg up on the matter, but without ability you'd be hopelessly lost.
myv65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 01:50 PM   #38
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51

w00t!! i made ol' grumpy LOL! even if the 2 loop dosnt work, it was worth it for that!

parts update: the poly-top WW is soon to be replaced with a Cascade!
so ill do a "real life" WW vs Cascade, then the 2 loop vs one. and ill post my (not so scientific) results here (too).

PS i thought i'd get A LOT more than i did. guess y'all arnt that bad here

thanks for the input
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 02:31 PM   #39
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by myv65
You're not often blatantly wrong Bill, but this time you are. If it all depended purely on one's interest, Ben would be king of the watercoolers. Much like you need a good pump, block, and radiator to create a good system (as opposed to one item being crap and trashing the entire thing), it takes both interest and ability. A good engineering education can serve as an immense leg up on the matter, but without ability you'd be hopelessly lost.
oooof, gut shot
the oldest trap, assuming that others are the same/similar
no argument; certain specific abilities are required to become a practitioner,
lesser obviously to come to a basic understanding - but still not for deadheads
(I should be more mindful of 'ability' given some huge difficulties in 'explaining how to interpret a graph')

but Dave, also of consideration is motivation
I'm operating under the assumption that I will have more success by pushing people towards the sources of info, rather than by telling them how difficult the subject matter may (will !) be

I would emphasize your statement as follows:
"A good engineering education can serve as an immense leg up on the matter, but without ability you'd be hopelessly lost."
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 03:48 PM   #40
Les
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Wigan UK
Posts: 929
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by myv65
You're not often blatantly wrong Bill, but this time you are. If it all depended purely on one's interest, Ben would be king of the watercoolers. Much like you need a good pump, block, and radiator to create a good system (as opposed to one item being crap and trashing the entire thing), it takes both interest and ability. A good engineering education can serve as an immense leg up on the matter, but without ability you'd be hopelessly lost.
Sweet, but the side swipe at Ben?
Bill I respect.
Ben comes across as a genuine person,who bows to reasoned argument with grace.
Les is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 04:15 PM   #41
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

Les,
I think Ben was cited merely as an example where great interest was/is limited by his education/ability. (specifically which was not specified)
Ben's achievements have always been constrained by his understanding, he is improving - but his lack of a sound technical education slows his progress.

The point I would make is that it should not be necessary to argue with Ben.
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 04:42 PM   #42
Les
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Wigan UK
Posts: 929
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by unregistered
The point I would make is that it should not be necessary to argue with Ben.

Point accepted.
However, why not use
http://my.coolingzone.com/#/forums/wwwthreads.pl .

Last edited by Les; 03-25-2004 at 04:54 PM.
Les is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 04:43 PM   #43
myv65
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: home
Posts: 365
Default

My apologies if it offends Ben, as that was not the intent. Bill has deduced my meaning. Ben has more enthusiasm than anyone else I know and has progressed mightily from his first days here. Had his education centered on engineering, much of his struggles would not have occured. His learning watercooling technology is akin to me learning Spanish. I have no gift for foreign language, but my wife has a degree in Spanish and my three year old can converse reasonably well in either language (running circles around my understanding). I am getting better, but can not pick it up with near the speed of my daughter.
myv65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 05:03 PM   #44
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51
Default

ahhh now thats more what i expected here @ pro (flame) cooling!


yo BillA, sup with the "deadhead" comment? (some reference to the pic of me wearing a "dead" Tshirt?)


how the hell does all this "ripping" on each other help us (me) learn about water cooling?

im not here to prove how smart (or dumb) i am!!
im here to learn from those who know (more) and pass on what i "know" to those who know less.

you can take all these "gut shots" and shove it up your 1/2" ID hoses! ...flame on...
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 05:22 PM   #45
Les
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Wigan UK
Posts: 929
Default

Joe Camel
Many of us have posted data or theoretical considerations.
Suggest a search of posts by Les,myv56,and unregisted may help.

Last edited by Les; 03-25-2004 at 05:34 PM.
Les is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 08:43 PM   #46
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Camel
ahhh now thats more what i expected here @ pro (flame) cooling!


yo BillA, sup with the "deadhead" comment? (some reference to the pic of me wearing a "dead" Tshirt?)


how the hell does all this "ripping" on each other help us (me) learn about water cooling?

im not here to prove how smart (or dumb) i am!!
im here to learn from those who know (more) and pass on what i "know" to those who know less.

you can take all these "gut shots" and shove it up your 1/2" ID hoses! ...flame on...
Then shut up, start reading threads and learn something.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 10:43 PM   #47
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51
Default

i have read. i have learned. i will continue to read. i will continue to learn.

i come here with an open mind. i dont spew my theories as law. i dont flame those who are (actually) trying to learn things. im not asking to be spoon fed. im asking for some guidance.

Punching you child for doing something wrong dosnt accomplish one thing. explaining to them what and why it was wrong and why they might want to do something different next time "might".

after reading (and learning) your 11 page thread,(http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/showthread.php?t=6385) i can say 1 thing: we ALL seem to be learning. every theory seems to have an exception and every setup is different. with this in mind and the fact that my "dead"head dosnt like math, i guess ill stick to the trial and error method.


its REALLY too bad a (hopefully) troll like Graystar gets 3 pages of y'all bending over backward to try and help, and i get told: "shut up, start reading threads and learn something"


oooof, "head" shot
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 11:25 PM   #48
Cathar
Thermophile
 
Cathar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 2,538
Default

Don't take it to heart Joe_Camel. The guys here really are helpful. You just have to show that you're willing to spend some effort. They'll rarely spoon feed anyone, which I typically attribute to the style of education that occurs at University. Being spoon-fed is easy and lecturers always held a certain amount of contempt for students who were merely sponges. The interesting students were the ones who go out of their way to investigate something, to show independent and inspirative thought. Don't be disheartened though, there's a lot to read and take in.

Sadly Graystar had a number of us fooled for a while there. He looked like someone who was capable of independent thought, but it merely turned out to be an illusion.
Cathar is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-25-2004, 11:50 PM   #49
Joe Camel
Cooling Neophyte
 
Joe Camel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: ohio
Posts: 51
Default i might like this place

sweet....Cathar typed my name.....and billA has responded to me too...im so

i was really just putting the guilt (flame) on y'all with that last post
(oooof, "head" shot)


dont worry Cathar, im bound and determined to test this theory out. (im 1/2 way there)

like i said we all seem to be learning, so ill check this theory out and see if there are any exceptions to be found.

feel free to add some guidance. (like: other than my MBM temp readout, i dont have any way to check temps...(add helpful hint here)


i hope i passed the audition
__________________
JoeCamel is F@H for ....A CURE!! (40+ GHz)

A64 Phase cooled:
FX-55 @ 3204MHz (267x12) - MSI Neo2 - MachII - OCZ DDR Booster & VX @ 3.6V , 267 @ 2,2,2,5 1:1 - x800 XT-PE @ 665/608 - DD Maze4 with 172w TEC 14V TEC PSU - 500W X-Connect PSU

A64 Water cooled:
3500 Venice @ 3000MHz (300x10) - DFI LP Ultra-D - Storm G5, D4 pump @ 16V, BIXII, 4x100+ CFM fans - OCZ VX @ 3.6V , 300 5:6 = 250 @ 2,2,2,6 - x850 XT @ 600/630 - socket A HSF & 80mm Tornado , copper mem sinks - OCZ 600W PSU
Joe Camel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 03-26-2004, 12:28 AM   #50
fhorst
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Almere, The Netherlands (Europe)
Posts: 262
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Camel
w00t!! i made ol' grumpy LOL! even if the 2 loop dosnt work, it was worth it for that!

parts update: the poly-top WW is soon to be replaced with a Cascade!
so ill do a "real life" WW vs Cascade, then the 2 loop vs one. and ill post my (not so scientific) results here (too).

PS i thought i'd get A LOT more than i did. guess y'all arnt that bad here

thanks for the input
Where did you get that cascade!!!
__________________
If it get's hot, it needs to be watercooled!
fhorst is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:52 AM.


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...