Page 5 of 10 FirstFirst ... 2345678 ... LastLast
Results 101 to 125 of 228

Thread: Stren's Titan Water Block Roundup

  1. #101
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    wow, only 20c. Seems like they run cool enough that you wouldn't need a heat spreader or anything back there. IR should work..look forward to your additional results..
    Yeah they do get hotter when you run an air cooler as they would roughly track the GPU temps, i.e. ~70C when the gpu was at 75C on air.

    Quote Originally Posted by dernettemann View Post
    wo looks nice
    Quote Originally Posted by LeoAndrade View Post
    only 20C? Any chance of you testing a universal block on this card?
    Quote Originally Posted by Vetalar View Post
    Nice results here! As an ati fan i'm not going to buy titan but good wb testing is my soft spot :-) also any universal block would be nice...

    send from Deathstar via HAL9000
    Yeah we'll see how time goes, with multiple blocks and multiple runs and the extra time to let MX2 cure then I might want to be selling this card before I get to that point. Plus I'm off on vacation for 10 days on wednesday so I'm trying to get out what data I can before I leave...

  2. #102
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Alright then. I got done with the first run on the Koolance block which is a real puzzler. I'm definitely going to have to run this block again to make sure this is legit:



    >> edit after removing the koolance block I noticed the TIM wasn't spread as well as it could have been and was still quite thick. This either means that I didn't tighten the block enough (unlikely but always possible) or that the contact area for the GPU is actually too high and isn't making good contact with the IHS.
    Last edited by stren; 05-13-2013 at 09:22 AM.

  3. #103
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    21
    stren
    >This either means that I didn't tighten the block enough (unlikely but always possible) or that the contact area for the GPU is actually too high and isn't making good contact with the IHS.
    Will be new results?

    And question about EK. This thing got like baffle before VRM zone. Sure it's made to reduce the resistance. But is that good for VRM cooling? Titan can take from PSU 330+ W (with modded BIOS) just under 3DMark11. Don't know about VRM's margin of safety on this card, but I never heard about deaths of these cards even under air cooling. So maybe nothing worry about.

    Ordered simple EKs + backplates. But Aquacomp's blocks are most beautiful, as usual. I think they must make XXL Edition, like EK did!
    Last edited by avabaska; 05-14-2013 at 08:15 AM.

    3 x Samsung S24A850DW | Aerocool XPredator | Intel 3930K (4.7 GHz @ 1.4V, HT off) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Corsair CMD16GX3M4A2400C9 (9-11-11-31-2T @ 1,65V) | 3-SLI Gigabyte Titan (1150/3200 MHz @ 1,212В, PCIe 3.0) | Creative SB X-Fi Titanium HD | Plextor PX-256M5P | WD7500BPKT | LG GH24NS50| Corsair AX1200i | Win7 x64
    WC: Phobya Balancer 450 Black Nickel | Iwaki RD-30 | XSPC RayStorm CPU | EK-FB KIT RE4 LE + Koolance MB-ASR4E | 3 x EK-FC Titan - Acetal+Nickel (in series) | 2 x Watercool MO-RA3 Pro 9x140mm (18 Noctua NF-P14 FLX) | Aquacomp Aquaero 5 PRO (Aquacomp High Flow, 2 x Koolance SEN-AP008G) | hoses 13/16 | Koolance VL3Ns | Koolance INS-FLTR01 + Alphacool mesh | Koolance LIQ-702BU-B

  4. #104
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Quote Originally Posted by avabaska View Post
    stren
    >This either means that I didn't tighten the block enough (unlikely but always possible) or that the contact area for the GPU is actually too high and isn't making good contact with the IHS.
    Will be new results?

    And question about EK. This thing got like baffle before VRM zone. Sure it's made to reduce the resistance. But is that good for VRM cooling? Titan can take from PSU 330+ W (with modded BIOS) just under 3DMark11. Don't know about VRM's margin of safety on this card, but I never heard about deaths of these cards even under air cooling. So maybe nothing worry about.

    Ordered simple EKs + backplates. But Aquacomp's the most beautiful, as usual.
    Yeah I'll be retesting all the blocks, I'm trying to run every block once first in case something dies.

    I did forget VRM and memory temps on the EK block, and Koolance had a backplate so I couldn't measure that one, but I have those temps on the AquaComputer block that I'm running now. Yeah we'll see about the VRM's. I'm measuring about 50C over ambient on the VRM's right now with the AC block. I think adding MX2 to both sides of the thermal pad really helps (which this run doesn't have), but I need to get firm data on that to be honest. I also noted that a thermal pad on the VRM sense resistor really helps to stabilize the card's power measurements over temperature. That resistor does not have a zero temp co and could be causing people to power limit unnecessarily.

  5. #105
    Registered User
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Posts
    3
    for the koolance vid titan

    do NOT use pads on vram chips
    block will not get enough contact to the gpu
    simply use thermal grease on vram chips - much better

    thats what i meant with koolance temperatur problems - just figured out

  6. #106
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Quote Originally Posted by naennon View Post
    for the koolance vid titan

    do NOT use pads on vram chips
    block will not get enough contact to the gpu
    simply use thermal grease on vram chips - much better

    thats what i meant with koolance temperatur problems - just figured out
    Cool I'll try this next - did that help your temps?

  7. #107
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Bend, Oregon
    Posts
    5,693
    Interesting flow behavior on the Koolance. Perhaps there is some block expansion happening as flow and internal pressure increases causing that. I know I have seen some odd things in pressure drop curves flattening out like the GTX radiator series that was presumably due to the very thin tubes expanding under pressure.

    Love the work and think the one mount concept first is very wise. Take care of that card and take your time. Enjoy the Vaca.. much deserved break!!

  8. #108
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    21
    stren
    >...but I have those temps on the AquaComputer block that I'm running now. Yeah we'll see about the VRM's. I'm measuring about 50C over ambient on the VRM's right now with the AC block.
    +50C from ambient directly on one of the transistors? And I guess it at stock clocks (with boost only)? I think it's a good idea to use a backplate with pads (need to pick up thickness) for VRM zone + slow fan for cooling that backplate. Did it with GTX 580s and will repeat with Titans.

    >I think adding MX2 to both sides of the thermal pad really helps (which this run doesn't have), but I need to get firm data on that to be honest.
    EK wrote about this in manual. But is that OK if I have MX3? And is there any benefit? If it's only 1-2-3 degrees...

    >[i]I also noted that a thermal pad on the VRM sense resistor really helps to stabilize the card's power measurements over temperature. That resistor does not have a zero temp co and could be causing people to power limit unnecessarily./i]
    Sorry, I don`t understand - resistor on Titan`s PCB?
    I only OC`ed this card under air (stock) in open case, fan was at 5000+ RPM and + two 120 mm side Slip Streams (1600 and 1900 RPM). Card consumption was up to 330W and back side of PCB (on the opposite side of VRM) was about 65-70C (infrared thermometer). Ambient ~24C.

    naennon
    >do NOT use pads on vram chips
    block will not get enough contact to the gpu

    But according Koolance manual, we must use them. That's strange. But also they wrote:

    Multiple types of heat transfer pads are included with some Koolance blocks.
    You might not require both (check the pad diagram). This is done because card
    manufactures change the component height tolerance from time to time.


    But it looks confusing, I prefer EK way
    Last edited by avabaska; 05-15-2013 at 05:51 AM.

    3 x Samsung S24A850DW | Aerocool XPredator | Intel 3930K (4.7 GHz @ 1.4V, HT off) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Corsair CMD16GX3M4A2400C9 (9-11-11-31-2T @ 1,65V) | 3-SLI Gigabyte Titan (1150/3200 MHz @ 1,212В, PCIe 3.0) | Creative SB X-Fi Titanium HD | Plextor PX-256M5P | WD7500BPKT | LG GH24NS50| Corsair AX1200i | Win7 x64
    WC: Phobya Balancer 450 Black Nickel | Iwaki RD-30 | XSPC RayStorm CPU | EK-FB KIT RE4 LE + Koolance MB-ASR4E | 3 x EK-FC Titan - Acetal+Nickel (in series) | 2 x Watercool MO-RA3 Pro 9x140mm (18 Noctua NF-P14 FLX) | Aquacomp Aquaero 5 PRO (Aquacomp High Flow, 2 x Koolance SEN-AP008G) | hoses 13/16 | Koolance VL3Ns | Koolance INS-FLTR01 + Alphacool mesh | Koolance LIQ-702BU-B

  9. #109
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    Interesting flow behavior on the Koolance. Perhaps there is some block expansion happening as flow and internal pressure increases causing that. I know I have seen some odd things in pressure drop curves flattening out like the GTX radiator series that was presumably due to the very thin tubes expanding under pressure.

    Love the work and think the one mount concept first is very wise. Take care of that card and take your time. Enjoy the Vaca.. much deserved break!!
    Thanks Martin - interesting - yes it reminded me of a laminar to turbulent transition plot from back in the day. But I thought we always had turbulent flow these days so your explanation might be better!

    Quote Originally Posted by avabaska View Post
    stren
    >...but I have those temps on the AquaComputer block that I'm running now. Yeah we'll see about the VRM's. I'm measuring about 50C over ambient on the VRM's right now with the AC block.
    +50C from ambient directly on one of the transistors? And I guess it at stock clocks (with boost only)? I think it's a good idea to use a backplate with pads (need to pick up thickness) for VRM zone + slow fan for cooling that backplate. Did it with GTX 580s and will repeat with Titans.
    +50C above ambient measured on the back of the board underneath where the VRMs are. This was the worst spot of the 6 phases, others were cooler. This raised to ~57C at very low flow. This is without TIM on the thermal pads though so I bet it could be improved.

    Quote Originally Posted by avabaska View Post
    >I think adding MX2 to both sides of the thermal pad really helps (which this run doesn't have), but I need to get firm data on that to be honest.
    EK wrote about this in manual. But is that OK if I have MX3? And is there any benefit? If it's only 1-2-3 degrees...
    Any non conductive TIM should be fine. I don't have a definitive numerical answer for you, but the EK block (where I did use TIM on the vram pads) was about 15C better on the VRAM chips on the back of the card than the AC block (where I didn't use TIM on the pads). Now that could be block differences but it might be the TIM.

    Quote Originally Posted by avabaska View Post
    >[i]I also noted that a thermal pad on the VRM sense resistor really helps to stabilize the card's power measurements over temperature. That resistor does not have a zero temp co and could be causing people to power limit unnecessarily./i]
    Sorry, I don`t understand - resistor on Titan`s PCB?
    I only OC`ed this card under air (stock) in open case, fan was at 5000+ RPM and + two 120 mm side Slip Streams (1600 and 1900 RPM). Card consumption was up to 330W and back side of PCB (on the opposite side of VRM) was about 65-70C (infrared thermometer). Ambient ~24C.
    There is a resistor (or at least I assume it's a resistor) for each phase next to the regulator labelled R22. I assume this means it's a high power 0.22 ohm resistor used to measure the output current of the regulator. But this is a guess. Most instructions tell you to not put a thermal pad on it, but when I didn't on the Koolance block the power measurements were very sensitive to block temperature and would raise 5% over the test. Given that with a stock bios you can easily hit the power limit when overclocking then adding a thermal pad to that resistor might help extend your ability to overclock it.

    Quote Originally Posted by avabaska View Post
    naennon
    >do NOT use pads on vram chips
    block will not get enough contact to the gpu

    But according Koolance manual, we must use them. That's strange. But also they wrote:

    Multiple types of heat transfer pads are included with some Koolance blocks.
    You might not require both (check the pad diagram). This is done because card
    manufactures change the component height tolerance from time to time.


    But it looks confusing, I prefer EK way
    Yeah I saw this yesterday too (I didn't have a manual shipped with the block as it was shipped so quickly). So they kind of agree except Koolance should have specified that you may not even have to use a pad at all if the spread is still too thick.

    Compiled the AquaComputer GPU core results - it's a bunch more restrictive as we knew from the earlier plots. In a single CPU, GPU, Rad, 4xQDC loop it could drop flow from ~1.05GPM (for EK and Koolance) to 0.85GPM. At higher flows it does about the same as the EK block, however at lower flows it does better. Between the two I'd recommend the AC for multiple cards in parallel and the EK for a single card, or cards in series.

    Note the lowest pump setting for the AC block is off the scale of my flow meter. The float was not pegged so I made an estimate of 0.28GPM, but this number will be far from exact.



    That's about all I'll have time for before I leave for vacation. I'll be back by the end of the month and will run the XSPC and then the EVGA. Hopefully the other blocks will arrive shortly after I get back.
    Last edited by stren; 05-15-2013 at 08:13 AM.

  10. #110
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Bend, Oregon
    Posts
    5,693
    Sweetness...finally some good data to understand lower flow rate performance too. I had always assumed the larger fin designs of GPU block would be more sensetive to lower flow rate. That AC block clear down to .25GPM is still doing extremely well. Just another reason not to get overly worked up about thinking we need high flow rates.

  11. #111
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    Lost in Transition..
    Posts
    83
    Thx Stren, and Hello Martin

    Those blocks are absolutely beautiful, loving the AC back plate.. definitely ordering a couple titan's this year (maybe 3 if it scales well in surround ), water blocks will definitely be used so keeping a eye on this thread.

    Looks like EK's and AC's are going toe to toe this round while Koolance is trailing just a step behind, so in the end it may just boil down to aesthetics and which company you prefer, those nickel plated AC blocks just brings another meaning to the word "Sexy".... ummmmm

    @shoggy, is there a SLI and Tri SLI block available that is compatible with the heat pipe or this is still in the works?
    I steal all your cookies !!

    Build Log AKA "Hamster" The Constant run towards evolution..

    RP452X2 "How to bleed" Guide...

    i5 2500K | 8GB 2133 Dominator GT | Gigabyte P67A UD7
    GTX580 x3 | OCZ Vertex 3 240GB | WD Blacks x2 2TB RAID1
    Corsair AX750 + 1200 | Caselab M10 + Pedestal
    Koolance 370 | AquagraFX 580 x3 | D5 x4 | Dual Loop
    Aquaero XT | PA2 x6

  12. #112
    Registered User
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Posts
    3
    sure it helped me out with my temps @ stren

    do it my way

  13. #113
    -100c Club
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Slovenia, Europe
    Posts
    2,283
    Love your work, keep it up! Have a nice vacation, recharge your batteries.

  14. #114
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    21
    Quote Originally Posted by stren View Post
    +50C above ambient measured on the back of the board underneath where the VRMs are. This was the worst spot of the 6 phases, others were cooler. This raised to ~57C at very low flow. This is without TIM on the thermal pads though so I bet it could be improved.
    Thanks for the answer and I'm very sorry for meddling in your topic
    Unfortunately, I can measure only the back side of PCB (so it can be + up to 10C to this temp = transistors temp) and there was up to 68C under heavy load (300+W) with water temp 33C:



    Also there was a faint air cooling (92 mm, 1000 rpm):



    And I did not succeed with pads for the back side of PCB, because had only hard pads from Phobya and a backplate began to deform when tightening the screws. So I decided not to install backplates, instead of this I used heatsinks for memory and just a fan for VRM zone. Not so effective, ugly but it works.

    Quote Originally Posted by stren View Post
    Any non conductive TIM should be fine. I don't have a definitive numerical answer for you, but the EK block (where I did use TIM on the vram pads) was about 15C better on the VRAM chips on the back of the card than the AC block (where I didn't use TIM on the pads). Now that could be block differences but it might be the TIM.
    It possible, but 15C on VRAM chips I thought if we have a strong pressing, like this (GTX 680):



    with a pretty hard pads (like EK's), there is no need of any other thermal interface. But if it will be a copper or aluminium plate, sure we need something like MX2 or 4.
    But look how squeezed they are... Maybe thermal paste it's a good idea. I'm starting to think, that I need to reinstall blocks (laziness...) or wait for the next upgrade

    Quote Originally Posted by stren View Post
    There is a resistor (or at least I assume it's a resistor) for each phase next to the regulator labelled R22. I assume this means it's a high power 0.22 ohm resistor used to measure the output current of the regulator. But this is a guess. Most instructions tell you to not put a thermal pad on it, but when I didn't on the Koolance block the power measurements were very sensitive to block temperature and would raise 5% over the test. Given that with a stock bios you can easily hit the power limit when overclocking then adding a thermal pad to that resistor might help extend your ability to overclock it.
    That's really strange

    Quote Originally Posted by stren View Post
    Between the two I'd recommend the AC for multiple cards in parallel and the EK for a single card, or cards in series.
    But our temps will be higher. BTW, I have not noticed any appreciable difference between three GPUs at ~230 l/h. Even at 175 l/h the difference was very small. Maybe even at 150 l/h it's better to use a series connection? In parallel, temp of all cards = last card in series connection. But if we have sufficient (or minium) flow only with one card and want to add two cards more, maybe we need use parallel.

    3 x Samsung S24A850DW | Aerocool XPredator | Intel 3930K (4.7 GHz @ 1.4V, HT off) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Corsair CMD16GX3M4A2400C9 (9-11-11-31-2T @ 1,65V) | 3-SLI Gigabyte Titan (1150/3200 MHz @ 1,212В, PCIe 3.0) | Creative SB X-Fi Titanium HD | Plextor PX-256M5P | WD7500BPKT | LG GH24NS50| Corsair AX1200i | Win7 x64
    WC: Phobya Balancer 450 Black Nickel | Iwaki RD-30 | XSPC RayStorm CPU | EK-FB KIT RE4 LE + Koolance MB-ASR4E | 3 x EK-FC Titan - Acetal+Nickel (in series) | 2 x Watercool MO-RA3 Pro 9x140mm (18 Noctua NF-P14 FLX) | Aquacomp Aquaero 5 PRO (Aquacomp High Flow, 2 x Koolance SEN-AP008G) | hoses 13/16 | Koolance VL3Ns | Koolance INS-FLTR01 + Alphacool mesh | Koolance LIQ-702BU-B

  15. #115
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Bend, Oregon
    Posts
    5,693
    AC block seems to be leading both aesthetics and performance so far although it does appear to be a tiny bit more restrictive. Have a great vacation, look forward to more later.

  16. #116
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Posts
    3
    Titan's block from Bitspower

  17. #117
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Posts
    317
    Quote Originally Posted by juthoss View Post
    Titan's block from Bitspower
    Fugly.

    wtf were they thinking with those huge black screw at the top?

    also, the internals seems a bit too simple and poor

  18. #118
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    21
    Cooling that memory chips on the back side - useless Max temp (55C) got chips near to VRM zone. But 55C it's nothing. So backplate it's only for aesthetics

    3 x Samsung S24A850DW | Aerocool XPredator | Intel 3930K (4.7 GHz @ 1.4V, HT off) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Corsair CMD16GX3M4A2400C9 (9-11-11-31-2T @ 1,65V) | 3-SLI Gigabyte Titan (1150/3200 MHz @ 1,212В, PCIe 3.0) | Creative SB X-Fi Titanium HD | Plextor PX-256M5P | WD7500BPKT | LG GH24NS50| Corsair AX1200i | Win7 x64
    WC: Phobya Balancer 450 Black Nickel | Iwaki RD-30 | XSPC RayStorm CPU | EK-FB KIT RE4 LE + Koolance MB-ASR4E | 3 x EK-FC Titan - Acetal+Nickel (in series) | 2 x Watercool MO-RA3 Pro 9x140mm (18 Noctua NF-P14 FLX) | Aquacomp Aquaero 5 PRO (Aquacomp High Flow, 2 x Koolance SEN-AP008G) | hoses 13/16 | Koolance VL3Ns | Koolance INS-FLTR01 + Alphacool mesh | Koolance LIQ-702BU-B

  19. #119
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    Lost in Transition..
    Posts
    83
    I have owned bitspower blocks (580 GTX models) in the past, they are surprisingly well built, I put those things through torture, literally... Remove / Installed about 5 times, ran coolants, mayhem dyes, flushed with tap water then distilled uncountable times, in the end I use distilled and silver coil only for long use, the quality of the nickel never budged and it never leaked, they are pure eye candy if you pop some LED's in them..

    Performance wise is a bit lacking, but beats stock air cooling by far,if you are after pure aesthetics, picture below is a old shot of mine.







    for my new cards, I have ordered some AC blocks with the passive back plates

    I wouldn't say back plates are purely aesthetics, for the temps it may not help much or be negligible as far as performance is concerned, but for the stability of the card, it really does help a lot, going tri or quad graphic cards + blocks + bridge, it weighs quite a bit.
    I steal all your cookies !!

    Build Log AKA "Hamster" The Constant run towards evolution..

    RP452X2 "How to bleed" Guide...

    i5 2500K | 8GB 2133 Dominator GT | Gigabyte P67A UD7
    GTX580 x3 | OCZ Vertex 3 240GB | WD Blacks x2 2TB RAID1
    Corsair AX750 + 1200 | Caselab M10 + Pedestal
    Koolance 370 | AquagraFX 580 x3 | D5 x4 | Dual Loop
    Aquaero XT | PA2 x6

  20. #120
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Stren is back! XSPC is on the bench then followed by the hydrcopper. So hopefully those results will be in by the end of the week. I'm following up with BP, alphacool and watercool to make sure I get sent the blocks soon now that they are all ready it seems. Phobya should be ready next month.

  21. #121
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    North Queensland Australia
    Posts
    1,445
    Quote Originally Posted by frank anderson View Post
    Snip
    Ouchies, most expensive SLI bridging ever! (Looks awesome as though )

    -PB
    -Project Sakura-
    Intel i7 860 @ 4.0Ghz, Asus Maximus III Formula, 8GB G-Skill Ripjaws X F3 (@ 1600Mhz), 2x GTX 295 Quad SLI
    2x 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 RAID 0, OCZ ZX 1000W, NZXT Phantom (Pink), Dell SX2210T Touch Screen, Windows 8.1 Pro

    Koolance RP-401X2 1.1 (w/ Swiftech MCP35X), XSPC EX420, XSPC X-Flow 240, DT Sniper, EK-FC 295s (w/ RAM Blocks), Enzotech M3F Mosfet+NB/SB

  22. #122
    I am Xtreme
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Auburn, WA, USA
    Posts
    325
    Hey Stren,

    I think you have a faulty block from us (warped or otherwise not flat), so we'll ship out another one. You mentioned a less than desirable paste spread. Do the standoffs sit flush when placed onto a flat surface, or does the block rock a little? In our tests on both Titan and GTX 780, the GPU was noticeably cooler with VID-NXTTN than with EK's. This "should" be expected since we're using denser and thinner fins, so I think this certainly sounds like a contact issue.

    A little off-topic, but our Titan block will be the first to use our new upcoming acetal SLI bridge connectors (as opposed to our usual sliding pipes). That's the reason the fitting area can be removed from the main block and has its own o-ring seal.

    Tim

  23. #123
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Quote Originally Posted by Koolance View Post
    Hey Stren,

    I think you have a faulty block from us (warped or otherwise not flat), so we'll ship out another one. You mentioned a less than desirable paste spread. Do the standoffs sit flush when placed onto a flat surface, or does the block rock a little? In our tests on both Titan and GTX 780, the GPU was noticeably cooler with VID-NXTTN than with EK's. This "should" be expected since we're using denser and thinner fins, so I think this certainly sounds like a contact issue.

    A little off-topic, but our Titan block will be the first to use our new upcoming acetal SLI bridge connectors (as opposed to our usual sliding pipes). That's the reason the fitting area can be removed from the main block and has its own o-ring seal.

    Tim
    Hey Tim - Yes there's a very slight wobble when I put it on a flat surface only in one direction though. And I love that you're doing bridge connectors too! If you decide to send a new one can you also send the short screws so that I don't have to use the backplate? That way I can measure the back of the board VRM/VRAM temps Otherwise once I'm done with the first test on all the blocks I have I'll go back and run without thermal pads to get some better data.

  24. #124
    I am Xtreme
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Auburn, WA, USA
    Posts
    325
    Ok, we'll ship today with two GTX 780 hardware packs (shorter screws).

    Thanks,
    Tim

  25. #125
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    845
    Thanks Tim

    For now I've removed the Koolance block off the chart until the new block gets here. I completed the XSPC run. It's less restrictive than the AquaComputer (though not as much as the EK) but performs the best so far. Now that we've zoomed in we can see that the data is a bit noisy. This is partly because this is a single run with ambients moving (my garage is not climate controlled) and because I'm using MX2 which although it has a short curing time still has some small curing effects despite doing an overnight pre run burn-in.


Page 5 of 10 FirstFirst ... 2345678 ... LastLast

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •