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 06-22-2004, 09:38 AM   #1
kronchev
Cooling Savant
 
kronchev's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Lawrenceville, NJ
Posts: 254
Default now THIS is a TEC

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...ayphotohosting

Hooo-boy. Would a maze4 block (would have to get the coldplate and clamp), doublefan heatercore, and L20 be able to even keep it realistically working?
__________________
Ghetto riggin'!

Last edited by kronchev; 06-22-2004 at 09:43 AM.
kronchev is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 10:01 AM   #2
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by kronchev
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...ayphotohosting

Hooo-boy. Would a maze4 block (would have to get the coldplate and clamp), doublefan heatercore, and L20 be able to even keep it realistically working?
That thing is 62mm x 62mm or about 2.5" x 2.5". It will not fit on a maze 4 or any current block I have seen. Would be nearly impossible to properly implement it on a current socket of any kind. Would be better to use this as a inline chiller.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 10:03 AM   #3
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

Also in their add I noticed they now have a 250/320 watt 50mm tech. That would be interesting.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 10:29 AM   #4
Groth
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: MO
Posts: 781
Default

You could fit in on Socket-A. Instead of using the mobo holes to directly bolt the block/tec/coldplate to the CPU, make a backplate with steel wires through the mobo holes.
Groth is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 10:39 AM   #5
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groth
You could fit in on Socket-A. Instead of using the mobo holes to directly bolt the block/tec/coldplate to the CPU, make a backplate with steel wires through the mobo holes.
Just need a block that could handle it. The problem is 2.5" is just about the max amount of room I have on any of my mobo's. You will still need at least another 1/4" on each side foru mounting of cold plate and sealing the block pushing the block to 3" which will not fit most boards. The tech is just to big. Would love to see someone try though.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 10:53 AM   #6
Groth
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: MO
Posts: 781
Default

I've got 68 by 80 mm to work with, it would just barely fit amongst the caps. Damn, it sucks to poor!
Groth is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 11:12 AM   #7
SlaterSpeed
Cooling Savant
 
SlaterSpeed's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Suffolk, UK
Posts: 234
Default

Buy it, sent it to me and il 'try'
__________________
aka. slater3333uk - The self proclaimed 'Middle Player'

'Liquified'
SlaterSpeed is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 11:13 AM   #8
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

I am just not sure it would be worth it. Would all that extra area actually get used? I wouldn't be a bit surpised ot see the 50mm 270/320 perform the same or better becasue of less wasted space. Well I got to many other problems to worry about TEC's right now.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 12:06 PM   #9
Butcher
Thermophile
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: UK
Posts: 1,064
Default

That TEC would have 460W coming off the back from just itself at full power (assuming their 30A @ 15.4V fogure is accurate), you'd need some beefy cooling for that.
__________________
Once upon a time, in a land far far away...
Butcher is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 12:17 PM   #10
jaydee
Put up or Shut Up
 
jaydee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 6,506
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Butcher
That TEC would have 460W coming off the back from just itself at full power (assuming their 30A @ 15.4V fogure is accurate), you'd need some beefy cooling for that.
And just as important one hell of a power supply. Hope the power is cheap in your area.
jaydee is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 01:05 PM   #11
BillA
CoolingWorks Tech Guy
Formerly "Unregistered"
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
Default

we are selling a WCed 360W 60mm now, but not to the public
(psu too big, a Kepco 36V - 30A)
BillA is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 02:00 PM   #12
gkiing
Cooling Neophyte
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Canada!
Posts: 21
Default

You would have to have a hellofa block to cool that.. several people have tried the 320W 50x50mm under a maze4 and swiftech and they get worse temps than the 226, because the blocks dont have the flow rates or cooling capacity to cool that much heat. It isint just the size of the block that matters.
gkiing is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 03:49 PM   #13
jlrii
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Posts: 158
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by unregistered
we are selling a WCed 360W 60mm now, but not to the public
(psu too big, a Kepco 36V - 30A)
I read somwhere b4 that TECs had a physical size limit due to fracturing from the stress of one side of the TEC expanding and the other side contracting when powered. Has some one found a way to avoid that?
jlrii is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 06:44 PM   #14
HAL-9000
Cooling Savant
 
HAL-9000's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 202
Default Doubt it...

Quote:
Originally Posted by jlrii
I read somwhere b4 that TECs had a physical size limit due to fracturing from the stress of one side of the TEC expanding and the other side contracting when powered. Has some one found a way to avoid that?
The issue you speak of doesn't necessarily instantly break the TEC, it just limits its number of thermal cycles in a lifetime. Take a 40mm peltier and this thing, and then power cycle them again and again. I bet the 40mm will keep doing that about four or five thousand (literally) more times after this monster cracks and breaks from the thermal cycling.

I imagine there is some size out there where it will break the first time, but it would be one big pelt. At half a kilowatt of juice, this thing seems big enough. The thing's big enough and powerful enough to move the heat off a small cooking hotplate! Pretty useless for CPU cooling, but its already been said: It would make for an awesome in-line chiller!
HAL-9000 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 07:09 PM   #15
Cathar
Thermophile
 
Cathar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 2,538
Default

What's the current/performance curve on that thing like? Would be interesting to drive around 4 of them at 5V in a water-chiller. Should be easily doable with an ATX PSU.

62mm will fit onto a Socket A. It is in fact the absolute widest thing that you can fit between the mounting posts, so yeah, it'd fit - just. Use a 1/2" thick cold-plate, mill out a step for the cam-box, and probably make the cold-plate large enough so that the socket A mount posts went through it as well for added mounting stability.

'twould be a damn heavy bit of kit to be sitting atop a ~100mm^2 piece of silicon though. Would want it sitting flat, not side-ways.
Cathar is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-22-2004, 08:57 PM   #16
joemac
Cooling Savant
 
joemac's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Dallas
Posts: 339
Default

Just got back from Fry's and saw that monster. Yeah that baby is big!
__________________
www.aquajoe.com
joemac is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-23-2004, 09:10 AM   #17
kronchev
Cooling Savant
 
kronchev's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Lawrenceville, NJ
Posts: 254
Default

Cathar had an excellent idea on [H]: PWM-controller waterchiller attached to a hygrometer to maintain it so that its JUST too warm to condense, but colder than the water. I can build a PWM circuit fine but forget the hygrometer if I get some money Ill get that going.


also: these guys are in jersey, as am I. I want to find out where they are so I can check their stock out

/edit:

http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/...s/circuit3.png

replace "fan" with TEC and that should work, if I use higher-amp parts?
__________________
Ghetto riggin'!
kronchev is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-27-2004, 02:35 PM   #18
gruntledweasel
Cooling Neophyte
 
gruntledweasel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Irvine
Posts: 63
Default

Holy crap but these things would've been handy while building my own chiller. You could make quite a beefy chiller out of four or eight of these things, and run 'em at 2-3V or so off a standard PC psu. I'm still tempted to get one just to play with.

Bill, would telling us a bit about any other "non-mainstream" TECs be a no-no? In fact, is there any way a nobody like me can find out about swiftech's industrial stuff? The info might've been handy while I was writing a paper for a thermo class a while back, and my interest is still piqued. (and I wanna drool over the pretty toys I can't afford, of course).
gruntledweasel is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-27-2004, 06:08 PM   #19
Butcher
Thermophile
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: UK
Posts: 1,064
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by kronchev
http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/...s/circuit3.png

replace "fan" with TEC and that should work, if I use higher-amp parts?
Yes, you'd need to replace T3 and maybe D1.
__________________
Once upon a time, in a land far far away...
Butcher is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 06-27-2004, 07:38 PM   #20
killernoodle
Thermophile
 
killernoodle's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 1,014
Default

This one is more realistic:http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tem=3823905554
__________________
I have a nice computer.
killernoodle is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 07-05-2004, 10:40 AM   #21
JFettig
Cooling Savant
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Willmar MN/Fargo ND
Posts: 504
Default

these peltiers arent as good as they seemed:
http://www.ocforums.com/showthread.php?t=310318


Jon
JFettig 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 08:56 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...