i and other members have been wondering does a bowed block work better on a quad than a flat base. please someone who has a clue let me know
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i and other members have been wondering does a bowed block work better on a quad than a flat base. please someone who has a clue let me know
The general consensus is that since C2D IHS's are bowed, a bowed water block will have better contact and thus lower temps. I've seen a few reports that a bowed GTX is better than flat, etc. and I would have to assume that this is true since both the Apogee GTX and Fusion are bowed by Swiftech and D-Tek, respectively. If you purchased your block(s) recently, (like, after July) they are bowed.
but is this true on the quads..I assume the area of bowing is "limited" and the larger dies size of the quads may allow some cores to run warmer ...
or as usually am I a moron on this:shrug:
also is the amount of bowing on a GTX better performing than bowing on the Fuzion
if your quad core is lapped than disregard bowing the waterblock? i got the d-tek fusion too.
bowing dropped temps by about 2C on my quad.
i want to bow my fuzion and add nozzles but dont know when they are comin out
Hello All:
I have a QX6700 and I bought a GTX and used the larger O-Ring to bow it. My temps went up 5 degrees. So I pulled the chip and with a straight edge determined that it had a high spot right in the middle. So I got some 1000 grit wet or dry paper and in 15 min. it was flat and so I bought a fusion and put that on and it works fine now (below 60 degrees C. full load). So it depends on your CPU.
Ed
me 2Quote:
i want to bow my fuzion and add nozzles but dont know when they are comin out
funny thing... last nite, i checked my Fuzion that i purchased from Petra's
i noticed one of the 4 screws was not tightened...
also, i noticed, when i placed a flat edge against the block, it is slightly bowed...
hmm...