Alright alright, i think it's stunning compaered to some i have seen.
More also allows for more load tuning as well.
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WOW....very Nice Clean, quality Workmanship:clap: :clap: You get a Cigar from me:up:
Sure, there might be more refrigerant when there is longer tubing, but more tubing also means higher volume.
Maybe it has something to do with too much tubing on the high side and not just too much tubing in general.
Thanks guys for the information. I was thinking of adding a Suction Accumulator.... would there be any advantages to the system?
Lower static pressure and less chance of floodback.
[QUOTE=n00b 0f l337;2591200]Lower static pressure and less chance of floodback.[/QUOTE
Is this a good thing or not needed in my system?
Can't hurt persay, more bout room. With constant heat loading systems (like chillers where you have a large specific heat of liquids), you wont need it all that much.
What kind of refrigerant flow control are you going to use Sweeper? TXVs? Cap tubes? other?
The load will be changing when the refrigeration loops are running, but you'll likely have a lot of thermal inertia (chiller res). Accumulators used for control of floodback are helpful at catching the liquid from an overfeeding situation, and if designed correctly they can store excess liquid on the low side of the system.
Downside of them is cost, complexity, space, potential to hold up oil and suction side pressure drop.
I will be using TXVs.....so, I'm guessing the accumulators will not be necessary.
it cannot hurt
I have twins!:D It was tight, but they fit nicely in the case.
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Aw how cute ;)
WOW amazing
Update pics of some the work I've been doing on the system. I know progress is slow, but as I stated in the beginning.... I'm making most of the parts myself and it takes time to do everything as planned. Hope you guys hang in there until this thing is finished!:D
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that is the greatest thing i have ever seen :o keep it up m8!
Just to be sure... that whole compartment on the bottom, thats going to be ambient temp air, right? Just the top, smaller box is going to be chilled?
Thanks Knightwolf! I'll keep you guys posted with the results. Hope to fire this baby up soon!:D
Alrighty.
Whats the deal with the huge coil of wire in the bottom right in the last picture?
Once Again More Questions:
01. You mentioned cooling the Hard drives in the first post, Will that loop be separate from the high pressure/low temp loop?
02. Have you decided on the parts yet (Motherboard, CPU, GPU, RAM, HDDs, PSU)?
03. Which sides are the front and back of the case?
04. Are you going to mount the PSU directly to the aluminum side or are you going to make a cradle/carrier for it to be supported by?
05. Is the bottom compartment bowing/warping downward due to the weight of the compressors or is it an optical illusion?
06. If it is not an illusion do you trust in the strength of the current case or will you reinforce the bottom with crossbars or some other method?
07. What type of pressure and temperature measuring devices are those and where can I find more details about them?
08. What diameter copper pipe is that?
09. Are you using flared fittings on the copper pipe?
10. If 09 is yes, what is your method of leak testing for flared fittings with odorless gases?
I use a spray bottle of VERY soapy water and look for bubbles around the fittings when I work with propane. It works most of the time but I wonder if your technique is any more reliable.
I just had thought. If the pump does produce the 150+ psi of pressure you could design an ultra restrictive impingement-cup blocks similar to Cather's Storm Blocks but tuned for a more powerful pump like yours.
Ah, I see.
Fantastic work with everything. :clap: :up: