If a board is well insulated and the user can afford the cost of power is there any reason a cascade couldn't be used on a daily basis for 8 hours a day 5 days a week?
:shrug:
Printable View
If a board is well insulated and the user can afford the cost of power is there any reason a cascade couldn't be used on a daily basis for 8 hours a day 5 days a week?
:shrug:
No, The only issue is the oil slowly logging in the evap or interage-HX (on a 3 stage) depending on how cold of a cascade your runnig. One could be used 24/7 wih a few warm-up/defrost cycles a day to say ~- 60c just log enough to thaw any oil if the cascade is .
Yeah that is a good point, at some level these oil separators are not 100%. So at some point, there will indeed be oil.
Where I live it is so humid in the summer it would be difficult to insulate well enough for 24/7 running especially at times when there wasn't much heatload.
In Stockton yes, in SW. Missouri not so much. I use 2 layers of closed cell foam,paper towel and art eraser on the back of the mobo, eraser paper towel on the front, dielectric grease in the cpu and 1st ram socket. In the summer I get condensation on top of everything including the back plate unless I bench the whole time.
That's odd. I live in Atlanta where the humidity levels appear to be nearly identical and when I'm on cascade I have run it with a usage pattern that Scott has mentioned without any condensation problems. My suggestion is to use less eraser and more insulation. Eraser is just a sealant as I'm sure you have realized. It has just horrible insulating properties.
Yes it does. I tried closed cell foam and I still got it at the first ram slot and the fan plug above the cpu. As long as the system is under load no problems but if idling in windows web surfing I get condensation after awhile. If you have any suggestions I'd be grateful. Last time I had an issue I posted those pics and most people said it was overkill
^^^^ Are You Controlling the humidity where the unit is located ????? When Humidity is 90% to 100% condasation will build much faster than one could hope it to evaporate. everyone ^^^^ is correct...more insulation & a good vapor barrier.
If your using extreme cooling on a Pc I would think one would take care of personal comfort and be in a air conditioned room. A dehumidfier would also help. The cooler,the drier the air the better. Condersation would be less in winter because colder air holds less moisture.
Damn Dumo, I remember that one.
Those were the days, no plate hx, self coiled, those 1/3hp matsu:banana::banana::banana::banana:a's are still kicking for you?
lol, what's the point having cascade 24/7 ? :)
Well if you don't pay the electric, to be awesome. Or have some super performance all the time. But I would have to agree, even phase is a bit much unless you just want to be a break neck about it.
[QUOTE=Dumo;4770829]3 months, 6 hours daily
Is that continious? If not Did you have it under load the entire time it was running?
When I first started using a pc for work they were 386,486,486DX2......Running auto cad or a CFD program (sinda/fluint) you spent a lot of time looking at the hour glass. Those early pc's didn't even have a floating decimal point,you had to add a math co-processer.
I never even thought about cooling a pc in the 80's to make it run faster and you needed ever clock cycle you could get. This is probably why overclocking started. :shrug:
wdrzal
Sure, I'm old enough to catch that time, first own PC was 8086 clone with 640KB memory :)
But today, cascade on NF4 :) hm :D
Anyway, thanks for info, useful!
In the comercial units, we delog for 10 minutes every 8 hours.
Well, back on those days copper pot making was on its early stages. The only way to push FX55/57 was to cool it colder than single stage...not to mention difficulties with cold bug
24/7 was not, but extended sessions of benching were fun