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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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06-28-2005, 07:46 AM | #276 | |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK
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06-28-2005, 08:18 AM | #277 | |||
Thermophile
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 2,538
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Read back through this thread. The answers and reasoning are there. |
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06-28-2005, 12:22 PM | #278 | |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Surf City USA
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06-28-2005, 07:54 PM | #279 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Dunedin NZ
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suprisingly enough frontal area doesnt equal surface area...
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Hypocritical Signature I tried to delete: Procooling: where scientific principles are ignored because big corporations are immune to mistakes and oversights. |
06-28-2005, 08:34 PM | #280 | |
Thermophile
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 2,538
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Hmmm, Lothar, it would seem that you're not quite following the whole line of reasoning on this. It's all laid out in this thread if you want to take the time to read it. Radiator performance is only partially linked to frontal surface area. The PA160.1 was designed for a singular purpose, but somewhat beyond expectations when using with a single fan will outperform radiators with 20% larger facial area than it, with ~3x the metal-air surface area, by 10-15%. Now if you're scoffing at a 30-35% improvement in per-facial area performance as being of minor significance then I don't know what to say. What this thread is about, or rather what it has become, is specifically how to maximise radiator performance across the range of axial fans that water-coolers use, regardless of the form factor, rather than blindly assuming that high-noise high-pressure radial blower driven heater-cores as exist in cars will translate well to the comparitively low-noise and weaker pressure axial fans. The PA160.1 was just the first. The PA160.1 just fills a very particular niche within a certain form factor and fan-power definition, although fan-power wise it works out well across a very broad set of axial fan powers. Still lots to do for other form factors. If you really want to understand it deeper, then read the thread, and while doing so, let go of your fixation on facial surface area equating to performance. |
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06-29-2005, 12:58 AM | #281 | |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Surf City USA
Posts: 433
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I'm not scoffing at your design. Just trying to see its benefit. I'm a dumb pilot by trade so I'll just wait for the data in graph form. |
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08-20-2005, 06:19 PM | #282 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Acadiana
Posts: 99
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is there any chance of getting a cadd drawing of the pa160? I'm particularly interested in physical dimensions so I can plan my next box ...doesn't have to be in cadd I can do that myself. Most notably the position of the barbs as offset from the grill area.
Drawings of the shroud would help as well. thanks csimon |
08-22-2005, 05:16 AM | #283 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK
Posts: 486
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No chance. There's a 1:1 Template for the rad at www.thermochill.com/guides.php with barb positions marked.
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08-22-2005, 11:13 PM | #284 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Acadiana
Posts: 99
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LOL ...thanks marci ...I was just there looking around I found:
Overall dimensions HxWxD = 214x166x50mm (90mm inc shroud).. and would have been happy enough with that! The pdf is more that I could hope for. This has got to be the most user friendly tank I've ever seen for sure ...will help a ton in my design process. Thanks again csimon |
02-16-2008, 12:05 PM | #285 | |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Englewood, CO USA
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Re: No competition, why only HWlabs?
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My story is that I'm essentially fed up with trying to keep my relatively modest rig cool with air (without driving myself bats with the noise), I want to move to water cooling, and I'm unimpressed by most kits that I see, especially on a price/performance ratio basis. I may well still go essentially the opposite direction (really big and external, instead of incredibly efficient and internal), except I absolutely insist on quiet fan(s) - no matter what some might mislabel such insistence. One fan I would like to see tested is the ThermalTake A2330 (e.g. http://www.svc.com/a2330.html ), which is rated at 54cfm at 16dba While I suspect it is too weak to meet even the relatively modest head imposed by the 160.1, I'm also sure I don't have anything like enough experience with such things to offer anything like a qualified opinion. What's neat about the fan is it's actually 130mm, but is designed to mount in place of a 120mm unit. Since it has a 3 pin connection, I can control it with the fan EQ on my mobo, linked to the temperature of other parts of the system. |
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02-16-2008, 02:48 PM | #286 | |
Put up or Shut Up
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Spokane WA
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Re: No competition, why only HWlabs?
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Try http://www.silentpcreview.com/ if you have not already. Pretty much the site for quiet cooling. |
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02-17-2008, 07:15 PM | #287 |
Uber Pro/Mods
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Location: New Hampshire (USA) Posts: Two hundred somethin
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Re: No competition, why only HWlabs?
We need some more new threads so these oldies don't keep surfacing nice to see new guys posting though
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10-05-2008, 02:33 AM | #288 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Quezon City
Posts: 1
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Re: No competition, why only HWlabs?
hello! can anyone explain to me what is GTX platform and Black Ice RXN?
thank you! |
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