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Testing and Benchmarking Discuss, design, and debate ways to evaluate the performace of he goods out there. |
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#1 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Greenville NC
Posts: 4
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vaeltaja over at overclockers sent me over here and siad I should ask you guys!!!!
Acually this is for my master's project it's on watercooling and I'm trying to finish up on the intro section with the last of my facts. "It is generally accepted that water cooling is 20% - 30% more efficient than air cooling." this is the only quote I could find on the web. MORE, LOTS , and TONS are not Technical enough for a master project. I was looking for some kind of numbers to throw in there 20-30% sounds to low but that wasn't for water cooling a processor it was for water cooling a frig on a boat . I though I recalled reading traveling water was 200-300 times more efficient and forced air. Any one have a good number I can throw in there or know of a source I can look into to get one. Thanks in advance! ZX |
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#2 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Omaha, NE USA
Posts: 216
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Well IMHO it is a lot more complex than that. What exactly is your argument. If it is just air vs. water that can be given a number all by itself. If you are tring to make a case for WC a CPU vs air cooling the numbers you will find are about what you stated.
The biggest advantage to WC is it can transfer more heat away from a heat source than air. The problem is what to do with that heat once you get it away from the source. If you are talking about real world examples it all comes down to money. The more someone is willing to spend on a cooling system the better it will be. The other thing is noise. A lot of people WC to get rid of noise. If you are looking for a complete water cooling system that can give you a number for how much better than air.... Here is my personal numbers, not scientific in any way, 22deg room temp, 2100+ running stock speed gives me 43 deg with a ThermalTake Volcano 7+, the same system water cooled with a modded Swiftech 462 and a chiller cooling the water gives 21 deg. Use that as you wish. I don't think it really helps though. Like I said it is a LOT more complex than you first think. I do wish you well on your project. Good luck. |
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#3 | |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 381
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Off topic... I'm not sure this is the most appropriate forum for this question... certainly it's not one of the busier areas.
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Michael E. Robbins M.A.Sc. Candidate, University of Toronto 12.1 GHz of AMD's finest (17.7 GHz total) crunching proudly for the AMDMB.com Killer Frogs SETI BOINC: Dual Opteron 246s (Iwill DK8N) | XP2800+ (Shuttle SN41G2) | 3x XP2400+ (ASUS A7N266-vm) SETI BOINC: 2x P4 2.8E (ASUS P4R800-vm) | Crunching 24/7 |
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#4 | |||||
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Boston
Posts: 238
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On the off chance your project is not in the realm of science or technology or engineering, I apologize for this post.
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Liquids have heat transfer coefficients in the realm of 100 times air. This does not translate to an "efficiency." Quote:
http://smg.media.mit.edu/people/Judi...Deception.html Quote:
BillA should be able to pick up the pieces. Alchemy Last edited by Alchemy; 03-29-2003 at 08:55 PM. |
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#5 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 381
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Well...... now that it's been said, I agree with Alchemy. There are quite a few large corporations that have been using water-cooling in servers and the like for quite some time now. Perhaps you should go to the library in search of journal articles written on this subject.
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Michael E. Robbins M.A.Sc. Candidate, University of Toronto 12.1 GHz of AMD's finest (17.7 GHz total) crunching proudly for the AMDMB.com Killer Frogs SETI BOINC: Dual Opteron 246s (Iwill DK8N) | XP2800+ (Shuttle SN41G2) | 3x XP2400+ (ASUS A7N266-vm) SETI BOINC: 2x P4 2.8E (ASUS P4R800-vm) | Crunching 24/7 |
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#6 |
CoolingWorks Tech Guy Formerly "Unregistered"
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
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come on fellows, you're being trolled
his MS thesis ? lol no, I really don't wanna know the school |
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#7 |
Thermophile
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: U.S.A = Michigan
Posts: 1,243
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Alchemy,
Loved that link you gave. LOL ![]() |
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#8 |
CoolingWorks Tech Guy Formerly "Unregistered"
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
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ditto, good link Alchemy
Thanks Blackeagle, I skipped right over it |
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#9 | |
Pro/Guru - Uber Mod
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Indiana
Posts: 834
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#10 |
Responsible for 2%
of all the posts here. Join Date: May 2002
Location: Texas, U.S.A.
Posts: 8,302
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The clearest demonstration I think can be found in OC's HSF and WB testing results, here
As you can see, the best WC kit has a C/W rating of 0.23, the best WC block is rated at 0.19, where the best P4 cooler is rated 0.16 (@ 51dB) or overall best HSF on simulator 0.22 (74 dB). Not entirely an accurate picture though, because a watercooled system can handle the peak loads a lot better (someone correct me here, if I'm wrong). Hawkzx: this seems far too simple a project for a MS thesis. Can you elaborate? I would expect this to come from an engineering level study, not from a Master's. |
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#11 | |||
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Greenville NC
Posts: 4
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The paper isn't about engineering and that is why I came here as one of the guys at overclockers suggested. I got my undergrad in cmgt (construction management). Very far cry from engineering I must say. One of my old committee members (an engineer now retired) has a book that had the numbers of AL, copper so the only one I am really missing is for moving water. Quote:
If someone knows of a book that will have the transfer rate of heat through moving water that would be of great help. I'm not an engineer, never studied that field wasn't bright enough for that. Also I really need it translated into words I can understand. btw plz stop flaming me if you can't help or don't want to just don't post a reply and I won't have a reason to return to this site. again thanks in advance for any help. ZX Last edited by HAWKZX; 03-30-2003 at 07:50 AM. |
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#12 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Greenville NC
Posts: 4
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I wanted to thanks everyone for their comments but I believe I found what I needed online when someone suggest that I have a look at the term "Thermal conductivity"
Table T6. Thermal conductivity of water and sediment types (Beaumont and Keen, 1990). Material Water Shale Limestone Sandstone Thermal conductivity (W/[m·K]) 0.61 1.13 2.929 4.184 thanks for your help ZX |
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#13 |
CoolingWorks Tech Guy Formerly "Unregistered"
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Posts: 2,371.493,106
Posts: 4,440
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ok, I admit it
I was wrong (see, not so difficult) not a troll just ignorant beyond belief let's hear it for US secondary education hey ZX, no problem we are glad to do our bit to contribute to the demise of our civilization |
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#14 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Greenville NC
Posts: 4
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just have one question... what is a troll in that context anyway? I really don't know, and i see my mayself as rather internet lingo savy.
BTW I really enjoy reading your reviews on OCs.com keep them coming. |
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#15 |
Big PlayerMaking Big Money
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: irc.lostgeek.com #procooling.com
Posts: 4,782
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I had a student that insisted on using the intareweb as the primary collection source for a senior (undergrad) thesis. I was pleasantly surprised that he (a) used EPA technical bulletins and engineering technical documents instead of fluff, and (b) appended them all to the thesis for those not inclined to do a web search.
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#16 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Los Alamos
Posts: 30
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ZX,
Late as regards this thread but some basics that would help your search. If you're only inerested in a few phrases for your intro then this post will be of no use to you. Heat transfer is general divided into 3 areas of study: conduction, convection, and radiation. "moving water" as you call it falls under the area of convection. Looking covection up in Webster's works fine for a better understanding of the word. Convection (convective heat transfer) is further divided into natural convection and forced convection. Natural convection is driven by density differences and gravity, buoyancy (same thing that floats a boat). (Fluid velocities in natural convection are low compared to those of forced convection.) Forced convection generally relates to pumping the fluid (gas or liquid) and the pumping dominates the effect of gravity to the point that the effect of gravity is ignored. Your "moving water" for water cooling fits into the area of forced convection. Maybe that'll help a little for web searches. You should be able to find tons of basic info on the web. Available books can be found also but they'll generally be written for engineering or physisc courses.
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DFI nF4 SLI-DR @266Mhz, AMD64 3700+ SD (2.4Ghz@1.58V), OCZ PC4200 (2*512Mb) 2.5-3-3-8@3V ----- SB Audigy2ZS + Klipsch Promedia 4.1, eVGA7800GT, RAID0, 2 80G SATA HDDs ----- Iwaki MD-20RLZT -> Storm -> Chiller -> Resev, PC_Power P&C Tubo-Cool 510Express/SLI in Lian-Li PC-V1200 |
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