MMM
Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 26 to 32 of 32

Thread: Retail (Newegg) 6800 gets SMOKED (good way)

  1. #26
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Québec, Canada
    Posts
    975
    ok.. look like there is some good batch in retail too

    impressive.
    Rig : Core 2 Duo E6600 | Scythe Mine | 2x 1gb OCZ PC2-6400 Platinum XTC | Asus P5B Premium Vista Edition| eVGA 8800GTS 320Mb | 1x Seagate 80gb SATA2 2x 250gb WD SATA2 SE16 Raid0 | SB X-Fi | OCZ GameXstream 600W | Silverstone TJ06 case

  2. #27
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    belgium
    Posts
    1,735
    great work JC .
    cant wait till my retail comes here

  3. #28
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Indiana, US
    Posts
    398
    Quote Originally Posted by K.I.T.T.
    NB can get VERY hot indeed. and water doesn't have any effect on improving yields on NB. Only sub zero does to some extent.
    There is a solution to that. Not too long ago, I saw a phase cooler with 3 seperate heads. One fore CPU, one for chipset, one for GPU. Now granted, it probably got maybe -15 to -20C temps at best, it's still subzero and it would still yield very good results.

    Abit KN8
    AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ @ 2.6GHz
    Thermalright SI-97A w/56 CFM Panaflow
    2GB G.Skill DDR500 GBHZs 0603
    eVGA GeForce 7600GT w/Zalman VF700-CU
    Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS
    160GB Western Digital 160GB Hard Drive
    500W XG Vortec Ver. 2 PSU
    NZXT Zero/Logitech MX518, X-530/Saitek Eclipse

    CPU soon to be under WATER (this time I mean it)


    Planned '07 upgrades: 19" widescreen LCD, mid-range DX10 card

  4. #29
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    269
    Quote Originally Posted by metro.cl
    you need to cool the chipset (put dry ice on it and you'll get almost unlimited fsb) to go for higher fsb that is the big secret of conroe.
    This man speaks the truth. I upgraded my NB cooling and now I can hit 400+ FSB easily now.
    Mobo ASUS P6X58D-E
    CPU Intel i7 950
    Memory 6GB Corsair Dominator Kit
    Video Sapphire 5850
    HD Intel X25-M 160GB
    DVD-RW Samsung SH-203B
    Monitor 2 x Dell 2209WA
    Case Antec Nine Hundred
    PSU Corsair HX620

  5. #30
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    1,315
    Wow, holy moly. That's friggin' awesome.
    MAIN: 4770K 4.6 | Max VI Hero | 16GB 2400/C10 | H110 | 2 GTX670 FTW SLi | 2 840 Pro 256 R0 | SB Z | 750D | AX1200 | 305T | 8.1x64
    HTPC: 4670K 4.4 | Max VI Gene | 8GB 2133/C9 | NH-L9I | HD6450 | 840 Pro 128 | 2TB Red | GD05 | SSR-550RM | 70" | 8.1x64
    MEDIA: 4670K 4.4 | Gryphon | 8GB 1866/C9 | VX Black | HD4600 | 840 Pro 128 | 4 F4 HD204UI R5 | 550D | SSR-550RM | 245BW | 8.1x64

  6. #31
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    497
    Quote Originally Posted by Zardokk
    There is a solution to that. Not too long ago, I saw a phase cooler with 3 seperate heads. One fore CPU, one for chipset, one for GPU. Now granted, it probably got maybe -15 to -20C temps at best, it's still subzero and it would still yield very good results.
    peltier+water is a good solution if you wanna go nuts. While peltiers normally need to be super-powered to handle a hot overclocked CPU, the northbridge does not produce anywhere near as much heat. While I' not sure how much we are talking about, I doubt it could be more than 5-12 watts or thereabouts. In other words, a small inexpensive 80watt peltier should be able to bring it to sub-zero. An 80watt peltier like this
    http://www.dangerdenstore.com/produc...&cat=30&page=1
    will use well under 100watts even at peak, and thus could alos easily be run on your primary PSU at 12volt as long as you have a reasonably beefy one (which is usually the case for us overclockers).

    So yea... theres your solution when it comes to subzero northbridge cooling. much less complex and much cheaper than a "hydra" phasecooler for sure =)

    While it is a lot of effort to squeeze out a few extra Mhz, I'd guess you'd see a noticable increase compared to stock cooling at the very least.

    -Stigma
    Last edited by Stigma; 08-20-2006 at 05:39 PM.

  7. #32
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Indiana, US
    Posts
    398
    Actually, a good pelt setup isn't much less complicated or much cheaper than a "hydra." To accomplish subzero cooling on the CPU, GPU, and rad with pelts, you'd need three pelts, a CPU block, a chipset block, a GPU block, a pump, a rad, tubing, fans, and a secondary PSU to run the pelts. That would cost roughly around $550 or so for just a decent setup. It wouldn't be possible to build a setup that would compete with a Hydra, but a high end pelt setup for CPU, GPU, and chipset would cost around $1000. A pre-build hyrda would be more expensive, yes. It would be around $1500-1600, but it would yield better temps than would be possible with a pelt setup, and it would be slightly less complicated. And if you really wanted to save some cash, you could build your own tripple-head phase cooler for around $7-800 if you really know what you're doing and where to find parts. If you're talking about JUST a chipset cooler, then yes, a pelt would be a much better idea. But if you want sub-zero on CPU, GPU, and chipset, phase is probably the best option. Or just for coolness factor, phase is the way to go. But this has really gotten off topic...

    Abit KN8
    AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ @ 2.6GHz
    Thermalright SI-97A w/56 CFM Panaflow
    2GB G.Skill DDR500 GBHZs 0603
    eVGA GeForce 7600GT w/Zalman VF700-CU
    Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS
    160GB Western Digital 160GB Hard Drive
    500W XG Vortec Ver. 2 PSU
    NZXT Zero/Logitech MX518, X-530/Saitek Eclipse

    CPU soon to be under WATER (this time I mean it)


    Planned '07 upgrades: 19" widescreen LCD, mid-range DX10 card

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

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
  •