pa120.3 single loop with fuzion nozzled quad core
3825mhz 1.512v loaded small fft's = 66-69c core temp
how many degree's should i drop adding a pa120.2 to the same loop with yate mediums?
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pa120.3 single loop with fuzion nozzled quad core
3825mhz 1.512v loaded small fft's = 66-69c core temp
how many degree's should i drop adding a pa120.2 to the same loop with yate mediums?
you wont see any differences even if you add another radiator because a single PA 120.3 can handle a overclocked quad easily. You should try to remount the waterblock again to see if any changes.
ok here is some more work...
3825mhz, 1.456v, 60-62c max load temp
adding another radiator won't adjust the temps? are you sure? I've reseated 4-5 times and this is the best so far.
Try touching your radiator with your hand. If it's quite hot, you can tell it's radiator or just needs stronger fans. If it's not that warm to the touch, it's safe to assume it's not the radiator that's lacking. A 120.3 can easily handle a quadcore on it's own. Even with 40cfm fans and 25c ambients it shouldn't reach those temps.
Is this a B3 or G0 stepping?
If this is a B3, then your temps are accurate.
What fans, and TIM used, and current room temp? :)
thats defo not a b3
other parts of your loop? pump?
where is it mounted? (airflow lacking?)
picture would be nice...
why definitely not a b3?
Hmm.. yeah, 1.456v is low.
Lowest stability I can get on a b3 is 1.53 at 3520mhz
If he has a G0, then his temps are ridiculously high.
i've been water cooling for a long time and i've been overclocking for a long time. i think its a pretty simple question ;)
why buy a pa120.3 vs pa120.1? because the pa120.3 has more surface area for cooling, so since i have a spare pa120.2 why couldn't i add it to my loop, and reduce my temps? i'm more curious in the benefit of adding it to my loop. is it going to perform as a pa120.3 + pa120.2 where my delta could be taken from martins spreadsheet and just simply added together, or are there more factors involved?
for those who are curious, system specs as they stand it probably will stay for awhile. i'm having too many crashes any higher.
q6600 g0 L733
1.400v 400 fsb
evga 680i A1 with vdroop pencil mod (1.400 is 1.410 on load)
geil pc-6400 800mhz 4-4-3-9-2T
I can get 3.825 @ 1.450v if I need to, but it kept crashing last night although it passed orthos fine.
More radiator doesn't equal lower temps always. You're not pushing that 120.3 at all with just the cpu on it. What your experiencing is just the limitations of water cooling. It comes down to how much heat you can transfer from your cpu to your block to your water and how fast that is achieved. It's not a radiator issue.
Assuming you have a good mount, those temps really don't seem bad for the voltage and oc you have on that quad core.
we need more info, CPU block, fans , etc.
FYI I'm getting 51ºC tops with my q6600 100% load @3.6 1.42V and I have a 8800GTS in the same loop using a PA120.3 with low speed YL with hot brazilian ambient temps.
You have a bad mount, low air, bad block, it is not a Radiator problem.
Sure could be, heres mine....G0, bah!
Lapped b3, in sig.
Low volts -
http://3dxtreme.net/other/Q6600%20L7.../3600-1.47.jpg
more volts.
http://3dxtreme.net/other/Q6600%20L721A%20B3/3717/2.jpg
just reading these temps, why is it people watercool again? They are only 10 degrees lower than good air and my ambients are 29 degrees.
Also the new pipes with fin, massive air-cooling technology has matured a lot in the last year. I remember building rigs a few years ago and the air cooling mounts were so backwoods, compared to todays.
But i would hope to get at least 50's under stress with water-cooling to make it worth the extra cost. I also got great temps with air on my first rig and had to think hard to decide if i wanted to water-cool or not.
Also it is a ego/bling thing to have a electronic unit cooled by it's arch nemesis water and you can say you designed and installed it....