how do you know this for sure?
i have the same tubing and yes you are right about everything being clear but i just thought it was the use of distilled water, i also have silver in my loop...
thanks for the info!
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So the 4 screws in the middle that go through the copper block are all you need to unscrew then the block comes apart. I did that but it's tight as can be.. do I just need to pull harder?
Primochill says so in the product description.
Sorry to keep this beast kicking but check out this awesome dye gone wrong mess:
Wicked eh? I suggested he come share but I guess he didn't get the link?Quote:
Here's a Swiftech GTX CPU water block that has a non-copper/soft metal in the top that has been reacting with chemicals in the fluid from mixing dyes.
The gunk:
http://imgur.com/ZFFCx.jpg
The dye alone (covering the pins) would have annoyed me without the gunk:
http://imgur.com/PRtiu.jpg
With some of the gunk scratched away: north myrtle beach hotels|miami hotel
http://imgur.com/AHVPo.jpg
With the gunk gone you can see how it was using the metal in the water block as some sort of catalyst eating it as it went:
http://imgur.com/xEifB.jpg
Coolant used: PrimoChill Ice Clear
Dye used: PrimoChill DyeBomb UV Blue (Approx. 1ml due to container breaking)
Re-Fresh Dye used: Feser View UV Blue (Approx. 10ml)
Wow.. Those pictures are going to make me have nightmares.....:shocked:
That is plain nasty......
However there is some good news, I just saved a bunch of cash changing my insurance to Geiko....JK...
At least the OP's nails are nice and clean......
Makes me think about the Primo Chill I have in my loop.......
Fluid XP.
The original was notorious for leaving a waxy residue everywhere.
And not its not a simple film, but a thick wax coat.
Needless to say... many many many hours in with my radiator + rubbing alcohol + rad flush was required to get rid of all that nasty stuff.
really makes me wonder is this just cause off mixing feser with other stuff if so with what did op mix it with ?.
Im running Feser one UV blue right now :eek:, Im going to disassemble both my loops soon and attempt to open my cpu-350 (last time i tried i couldn't open it)
Dam guys thats some nasty stuff, I was using the feser uv blood red for a week but didnt wanna take the chance even with PT nuke so i ended up using distilled + Utopia which is basically the same as PT nuke.. @Naekuh u got pics dude? sounds interesting :D
Any updates for the effect of Feser 1 UV dye? Because I'm going to use Feser 1 for my dual loop and don't want to see many gunks around wc parts :eek:
Get coloured tubing.
I'm fairly positive that SNiiPE didn't mix anything else in with it. He also isn't the only one having the problem so it's not an isolated incident.
You may want to reconsider using that crap too. It has some form of surfactant (such as Water Wetter), which we stopped using a long time ago as it didn't have any positive impact on the system and long term use showed a slimy buildup on components that was difficult to remove and hurt temps.
why not do distilled + a bit of propylene glycol? I have unlike metals in my loop... so without a softener, galvanic corrosion would eat through my rad, in due time.
E: actually, whatever because that's what i've been doing for years and never had problems. *shrug*
E2: it's cheap too, you can just buy the green antifreeze. that's what it basically is.
Hi!
How is it an absolute best? In temps vs distilled?
Btw, something about the stuff.
http://www.naturalnews.com/023138_pr...od_health.html
Also, mixing all the metals are fine except for AL as Polizei has mentioned.
Wes
so getting any kind off corosion is just imposible without corosion protection like when you got copper rad some nickel + bras fittings etc.
cous i'm thinking about going demi + killcoil atm ;P
Glycol is toxic, and reduces the efficiency somewhat. It's not as much antimicrobial as silver or copper. And since it's an alcohol, it destroys acrylic and generally doesnt play well with plastics (even tubing not meant for it).
Unless you need its antifreeze properties (in which case you know what you are doing playing with a chiller) it's not a good solution for room temperature pc watercooling.