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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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08-23-2004, 11:14 AM | #101 | |
Cooling Savant
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Quote:
Was taking the HE 120's to be 50mm thick(from Therochill with unknown FPI. Although have been using 14FPI for the Honda it is only a choice of convenience, so as not to conflict with your 14FPI The P/Q curves calculated for radiators are for the dimensions shown. "Billa data" is eyeballed "Billa data" Maybe a simulation for the Serck will..... Possibly thin thickness can be considered as a "Hydraulic Thickness" The flow is laminar in all the simulations Since, here, am only dealing with air-flow have not considered the spacing between tubes.This becomes important when considering the Thermal efficiency of the fins. Like wc the higher h(conv) the smaller the spacing and thicker the fins need to be.Hence included this in post re properties of a 240x120x12.5mm,30FPI x 0.1mm fin design : "3.7Pa @ 1m^3/min . h(conv) ~133w/m^2*c and finning efficiency ~80% with 8 tubes Edit: Finning efficiency ~ 15% with 1 tube" Edit: The Finning Efficiency is for Al Fins and no allowance for tube thickness. For Cu Fins ~90%(8 tubes) and ~20%( 1 tube) - rises to ~ 95% for 12 tubes. Last edited by Les; 08-25-2004 at 12:24 AM. |
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08-23-2004, 03:53 PM | #102 |
Cooling Savant
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08-23-2004, 07:44 PM | #103 | |
Thermophile
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Quote:
Moving from 16x16 to 12x12 almost halves the effective core facial surface area, and as a consequence, almost halves the amount of air-flow you will get through the thing at the same air-pressures. That's not to say that 12x12cm radiators can't be done well, but it's a MUCH larger challenge than using a 16x16cm radiator. Given that all cases are at least 16cm wide (to cater for 5.25" drives and the like plus mounting) it seemed like a decent size to use. |
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08-24-2004, 08:09 AM | #104 |
Cooling Savant
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Yeah by 120 I meant 'fit in a PC easily' size, compared to the 30x24cm of that honda you're testing. 160x160 would be perfect....roughly the size of a single heater core that takes a 120mm fan with a shroud.
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08-25-2004, 05:54 AM | #105 |
Cooling Savant
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Some simple radiator designs and performance predictions.
For heat transfer, treated each radiator as 12 parallel single tube,240x10x*mm heat-exchangers. Air flow allowed for 12x2mm thick tubes, ie treated as 240x96mm frontal area |
09-07-2004, 01:48 PM | #106 |
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Has anyone done a recent roundup/comparion/review of the current crop of single 120mm radiators? I'm in the market again and I can't seem to find enough information to point towards the "best" one.
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09-07-2004, 01:54 PM | #107 |
Cooling Savant
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that's the point isn't it?
no "best" 12x12cm radiator noise preference comes first, then fan selection, take into account the physical space you have to work with, etc.....problem is that radiator selection seems somewhat slim to begin with. |
09-07-2004, 02:31 PM | #108 |
Cooling Savant
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I would assume (and here's where I get into trouble) that, at a given CFM, each radiator will have a performance index of noise output, heat dissipated, and other variables I have no clue about.
And there are some static figures for pressure loss/restriction, size, etc. I just don't know where to find enough facts, figures, and test data to make an educated decision on which is the best for my situation.
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11-13-2004, 08:02 AM | #109 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Nothing new for this thread ?
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12-13-2004, 04:47 PM | #110 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Guess not :-(
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12-13-2004, 05:17 PM | #111 |
CoolingWorks Tech Guy Formerly "Unregistered"
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kind of continued here http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/sho...8&page=1&pp=25
just working through the HW Labs products |
12-13-2004, 06:26 PM | #112 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Thanx. I'll have a look at it.
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03-16-2005, 11:07 AM | #113 | |
Cooling Savant
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Righty then....
Quote:
Last edited by Marci; 04-21-2005 at 10:30 AM. |
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03-16-2005, 11:26 AM | #114 |
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Joe Citarella has access to Andrew LeMont's wind tunnel (Millennium Thermal), but the temps are not really controlled (for me anyway)
your worst difficulty will be to correlate different data sets, be sure to also test a 'known' rad A to B testing will make your point, just not too elegantly - but hey, what are the alternatives ? |
03-16-2005, 11:40 AM | #115 |
Cooling Savant
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will post up some pix of it in a mo.... indeed, Joe Citarella is looking like the only option for comparative purposes... Safest bet probs to send HE120.2 & PA160.1 (This 160x160) over, but which fans should be used for testing?
The 160x160 was designed for the PAPST as spec'd by Cathar, and his theory was that this 160x160 with PAPST would match the performance of a HE120.2, but with which fans on the 120.2? Panaflo -M or -H are the usual suspects for me... |
03-16-2005, 11:50 AM | #116 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Alphacool have launched a range of what appear to be BIP style radiators calling them NexXxoS Xtreme. I haven't had sight yet but the pricing is attractive (120.1=EUR30 , 120.2=EUR40 120.3 = EUR50).
Of course the design could turn out to be not so great on futher investigation...... |
03-16-2005, 11:55 AM | #117 |
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Joe may use his 'calibrated' fan, (with which I TOTALLY disagree)
insist on using yours' in an A to B, the best fan for each unit - but think hard on max noise, the days of 45db(A) rad fans are over the Alphacool are dual core, see Joe's test of the CoolWave (another test to shudder about) |
03-16-2005, 12:01 PM | #118 | |
Cooling Savant
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Quote:
Same rads as marketed in the UK under the brand name of XSPC, made in Taiwan under cheap labour... direct clones of Innovatek's range... with the addition of the 120x3 model, which Innovatek don't produce and doubt ever will... clone and expand appears to be the way of things at the mo in Taiwan... same company that produces the rads also produces a load of DangerDen clone waterblocks, LRWW clones, as well as clones of Innovatek's reservoirs... see this page: http://www.colorstone.com.tw/product...&productid=482 DD Clones are labelled as "NAZI" blocks LRWW Clones labelled as "462 block" RE1 range is a duplicate of Innovatek's plugon Tank-O-Matic but expanded to support a wider range of pumps. MWD120 is the rad clone. So, XSPC, Coolwave, AlphaCool, MWD... all the same product with a different badge on the box so to speak. The pricing on them is all down to everything being cheaper in Taiwan, and looks set to demolish the European Manufacturers, ThermoChill (O-CuK / www.over-clock.com) and BI (HWLabs) included should they take off well... That's just the main outlet for em all... they're made by someone else, and the link is already up on here somewhere... but can't remember where offhand. Last edited by Marci; 03-16-2005 at 12:45 PM. |
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03-16-2005, 12:30 PM | #119 |
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not Taiwan, too expensive
China the times they are a changing, adapt or die yes, we too are concerned - but we are not waiting either |
03-16-2005, 12:43 PM | #120 |
Cooling Savant
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Ta fer the correction - keep forgetting that! Added EDIT: line in me post to cover the confusion...
Tis definitely a case of no rest for the wicked n' all that jazz ;P Hence the reservoirs yesterday (see Araldite 2022 thread), and...: As you can see, shrouded at 12.5 degrees from vertical results in it being rather on the large side... 12.5 degrees from Horizontal resulted in a shroud that wasn't worth bothering with as was ridiculously small... and it's single row, single pass. ^^ 14FPI... tis more see-thru than it appears in the photo... wasn't particularly well squared on the radiator... ^^ Beside a PC60 for scale... ^^ Hanging from an old MountainMods wrapper (old as they no longer use the U wrapper, they use 3x separate panels) ^^ And mounted in the MountainMods... So, does it LOOK as expected?? Is that shroud seriously correct??? Really want Cathar's input on this seeing as it's the spec he came up with... IMO, 160x160 is still a tad large tho in terms of ability to mount in a case. Width wise it fits, but lengthwise (barb to barb) it's a bit on the long side.. 160x120 on the core, + end chambers would be more accomodatable in terms of yer average case... Next plan is to get the ThermoChill Waterblocks sorted for use with A64 and LGA775... iirc testing ages ago showed them to perform quite peachy at low to moderate flow, so figure coupled with the rad above, the res and the DDC or CSP-Mag should make a peachy l'il kit... we shall see...! Only thing we're missing is a British-Manufactured pump now... we've done the rest... SIDENOTE: Are there any other British Manufacturers around anymore that anyone's aware of?? Or is ThermoChill the only one left now? (Bearing in mind XSPC buy their bits in from China so don't really count as a British Manufacturer...) Last edited by Marci; 03-16-2005 at 01:03 PM. |
03-16-2005, 01:47 PM | #121 |
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Thanks, for the info. These are 30mm thick as opposed to the 45mm XSPCs so I guess they've expanded their range (or a similar outfit has a varient).
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03-16-2005, 01:52 PM | #122 |
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30mm means single core ?
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03-16-2005, 02:02 PM | #123 | ||
Cooling Savant
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I'm not at all convinced that you need quite this much plenum on the pull side to get somewhat-even flow between all the fins, although I'm prepared to be convinced - and many cases do have room for this if the rad is positioned in the lower front of the case. Finally - I want one! Quote:
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03-16-2005, 03:41 PM | #124 | |
Cooling Savant
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Quote:
They do however sell a kind of integrated res/rad that is similiar in concept to a Zalman Resorator. You can get it in different lengths up to one meter, and unlike Thermaltake's outright ripoff of the Zalman unit, this one doesn't look like some phallic symbol either. God save the Queen. |
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03-16-2005, 09:03 PM | #125 | |
Cooling Savant
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Quote:
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