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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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04-18-2004, 07:47 PM | #51 |
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A couple comments (unfortunately, I'm not flaming anyone, so if that dissapoints you, you can skip this post)
I'm pleased to see that someone (and in retrospect, I don't think there was any other player who could make this shift) has tried to push watercooling towards the workstation/server market. Price is a major factor here - most processors can be had with free retail fans, but everyone here knows their downsides - high processor temperature and lots of noise. A drop from ~50 to ~40 USD is big here; while it isnt much if you are buying one processor, if you have 50 dual processor workstations, its suddenly a $1000 difference (scale up to your heart's content). Of course, the MCP600 is still $85 which cancels out most of that advantage . It seems me that the lifespan of traditional aircooling is reaching an end - especially when you are starting to see 4x89w Opteron processors in a case. Which of course makes me wonder, why are people with server processors being "punished" with a $2.51 premium per processor? I can't see production costs being any higher for an Opteron or Xeon mounting solution. I would think if any sector needed lower costs to push acceptance, it would be the commercial/server market - we know enthusiasts will pay $80+ for a quality waterblock. Kick me in the face if I'm reading these graphs wrong (its late here) but if the 6000 outperforms the 5002 by nearly 2C at all flow rates, wouldn't that suggest we're looking at performance comparable to RBX/WW at flow rates under 2gpm?
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04-18-2004, 07:53 PM | #52 | |
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Bill: Can you at least tell us if we matter? |
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04-18-2004, 08:01 PM | #53 |
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"Bill: Can you at least tell us if we matter?"
hugely, my job depends on YOU !!! be more specific does WCing matter ? to us, sure in the 'grander scheme', don't see no water there (IM not HO) EDIT: balefirex deltaTs are not C/Ws, conversion based on heat load, not exactly straightforward Last edited by BillA; 04-18-2004 at 08:06 PM. |
04-18-2004, 08:01 PM | #54 | |
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Fairly easy to get 1.5-2gpm through a White Water when in a loop by itself. Looking at the graphs, one would say 0.01-0.015C/W difference. Pretty close, and definitely very price/performance competitive. |
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04-18-2004, 08:07 PM | #55 |
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liquid-cooling a server..........
only reasonable reasons for such endeavor is A: reliability B: reliability and C: reliability.... that is it.... cost is irrelevant. for most server applications one hour of down time will nullify any savings made by buying cheap hardware. centralized liquid cooling on large clusters is not new...(Cray) it is actually a very good and feasible way of doing it reliably.
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04-18-2004, 08:07 PM | #56 | |
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CPU makers will have to stop increasing heat soon, because the OEM's will push back very hard. Already we see Intel radically re-thinking its Prescott strategy and making internal upheavals to more strongly promote the Pentium-M style architecture and method of doing things. Also, environmentalist lobby groups won't be happy with 150W juice-suckers sitting on every desk. I don't foresee a world where 150W CPU's can ever be mainstream, and the cooling limitations are not the only reasons why. |
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04-18-2004, 08:09 PM | #57 | |
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I know who #rotor is, I joined this site about a year ago, lurked approx. 6 mo before that or do just like using me as the example of the lay person? heh |
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04-18-2004, 08:22 PM | #58 | |
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04-18-2004, 08:31 PM | #59 | |
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I guess I will let Bill respond to that.
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04-18-2004, 08:35 PM | #60 | |
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Looking at the big picture, the electrical usage over the last century has increased at an incredible rate - 50 years ago the combined electical usage for the US was around 200 billion kilowatthours... now its closer to 4 trillion. Moore's law keeps being extended by some new discovery, but one of the downsides of adding more and more transistors is more and more heat. Shifting to smaller processes has helped that, but eventually air cooling as we know it is going to have to go. Whether it is replaced by nano-lightning bolts, or synthetic diamond heatspreaders, or by phase change systems, or by fully sealed water cooling systems is yet to be seen. #rotor raises a good point with the reliability issue - actually, its my major concern with water cooling for workstations and small servers - yes, when implemented correctly in one large solution (like Cray) it works well. But when you have lots of servers or workstations, the chances of a pump failure or leak increase to near certainty, even with competent installation. If a HSF dies on a modern CPU, the system will shut down or warn you of overheating and usually there will be no damage and minimum downtime. If a pump fails, you have to drain the system, replace the pump, fill and bleed, and then start it up again - takes a good bit longer than an aircooling replacement. If you get a leak... well, quite possibly, goodbye expensive server and lots of downtime.
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04-18-2004, 08:36 PM | #61 |
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Why would Bill respond to that? Sure, he termed it oddly, but it's still accurate. Here's a hint: look up speed. I believe they teach the scientific definition in Grade 10 (stupid education.) I thought that manufacturers would be forced to cool down, but I didn't want to appear as a brainwashed Ed Stroligo reader, and I didn't know if everyone else agreed with me. Bill: Do enthusiasts make up the majority of your sales, or is that too specific? Can anyone give me any indication of how big the WCing market in NA is? joemac: Are you affiliated with www.aquajoe.com? If so, I'm really not impressed. Balefire: Look at the physical limitations. Look at the work towards cooling down. They're both pretty great (meaning large or immense/ we used it in the perjorative sense!)
Edit: On the issue of server reliability, wouldn't an SP-97 with a tornado be more reliable? Fans seem much less likely to fail than a pump and fans together. Last edited by AngryAlpaca; 04-18-2004 at 08:42 PM. |
04-18-2004, 08:43 PM | #62 | |
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One can point out many, many cases in the past where the expert say enough no more can come from this or it can’t be done.Yeah I remember the sick look I got the first time I told a computer “Expert” that I was using a fan to aid in CPU cooling. Very good point BalefireX.
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04-18-2004, 08:54 PM | #63 | |
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What I'm saying is that there are more pressures at work here than merely "How can we cool 150+W effectively?". |
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04-18-2004, 09:01 PM | #64 |
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Are you sure? People and OEM's don't want to deal with the hassle of watercooling, nor the noise of extreme aircooling. We'll soon have things that make http://www.thermaltake.com/coolers/c...24tower112.htm look small, and people will stop taking the high heat crap. Also, will an ordinary person pay more for their heatsink than their processor? Doubtful at best.
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04-18-2004, 09:07 PM | #65 | |
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For what its worth you are 100% correct on this (at least for the major OEM and at this point in time). I have visited some and they cringe at the thought of water-cooling one even made the comment “Unless intel tells us to water cool we wont”
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04-18-2004, 09:13 PM | #66 |
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That's a small OEM. I'm pretty sure Intel is Dell's bitch. Dell can switch to AMD in a moment's notice, and only have a slight drop in sales, but Intel can't switch, to let's say, Alienware, and survive.
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04-18-2004, 09:17 PM | #67 | |
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04-18-2004, 09:46 PM | #68 | |
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oh.. I thought he was being facetious. I didn't think that needed clarifying Yes I am
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04-18-2004, 10:51 PM | #69 | |
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Flow rate, i.e. gpm (gallons per minute) Flow speed, i.e. fps (feet per second) The higher flow speed creates the turbulence that increases the performance... bla bla bla... by reducing the boundary layer... sound familiar? |
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04-18-2004, 11:13 PM | #70 |
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If you think Dell rules Intel you have the relationship reversed. There are easily half a dozen companies who would practically die to have Dell's relationship with Intel, and if Dell were to screw up in the slightest they'd be first in line to help poor Intel. (haha)
Dell is more like the favored slave, allowed to speak up and say its mind as long as it doesn't go too far in doing so. Any significant deviance has a brief memo from Intel that is as close to a whipping as we need in the modern world. You want to know why Dell doesn't sell AMD? Because if they did Intel would take the "we made you and we can break you" stance. Anyway the new design looks very interesting indeed, I won't claim the expertise of others here, but certainly there are a lot of 3/8" users out there, and the mention that a 1/2" is coming certainly fixes the pro concerns. And while I do realize that every C matters, I'd say that to some degree a few tenths of one difference of one block to the next is really splitting hairs, and could easily be compromised by the nature of the installation, other blockages, bends, even older equipment (not like any of you have old equipment still in a pc, hehe). So my thought is that this block performs in the same league as the best, pending pH's review, and yet costs less, has superb fit and finish, and to my eyes sets a reasonable mark in the industry. I don't wish to disparage the great designers and sellers present, but rather give some credit for what looks like a very nice product. $.02 |
04-19-2004, 12:06 AM | #71 | |
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04-19-2004, 11:59 AM | #72 |
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So many posts, so little of relevance.
When can we get our hands it? |
04-19-2004, 03:34 PM | #73 |
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BillA, you mentioned it was designed to be used with the MCp600 pump, which is way out of my price range. How will it work with a lesser pump such as a HydorL30 or Mag3?
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04-19-2004, 05:06 PM | #74 |
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a pump just moves the coolant
slightly less powerful pump, slightly less performance all a matter of degree, and how important those degrees are to the individual user |
04-19-2004, 06:28 PM | #75 | |
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