MMM
Page 1 of 5 1234 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 122

Thread: Thermochill rad flux cleanup

  1. #1
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482

    Thermochill rad flux cleanup

    Like many, I "thought" I had cleaned up the rad well and good with hot water and lotsa flushing and crazy shaking.

    All it took was for my trusty MCP655 48hrs, and I start to see snowing in the res (not all the white stuff are bubbles)


    The tygon started to cloud and deposits can be seen at the bends. That bright spot on the res's "paddle" is also a thick deposit of flux!
    Ignored it for quite sometime but finally couldn't take it anymore and decided to do some major cleanup!

    After much hot water soaking and pulling a test tube brush through the tubings, all I did was to brush the deposits into a nice pattern (in whichever way the brush hairs happened to run through)

    Taking the advice of Xilikon (thank!), I grabbed some 70% ethanol from the lab I worked at and repeated the soak + brushing.
    Crystal clear tubings!!
    The thing was, just shaking with ethanol didn't quite got rid of the flux, brushing was still needed.

    All other parts in the loop (cept the res, O rings and pump) were cleaned the same way, followed by distilled water rinse.

    That got me worried bout the rad and res, since I can't quite brush the insides.
    Rad's soaking in ethanol for 48hrs now and I'm trying to get a small brush for the res. May try soda water on the res since I can't use alcohol on it.

    Here's the last and best part: I also cleaned up the coolant
    I was using PC ICE...should've ran the leak test (cum flux dirt test) with distilled instead, mistake there

    Not willing to throw away a full bottle of PC ICE, I collected and brought the murky bottle to my lab.
    Poured the liquid into centrifuge tubes and gave them 15 minutes at 5000rpm in the spinner.
    Was tempted to use the 13 000rpm monster centrifuge but after looking at the results of the 5000rpm, was convinced that its good enough





    Check out the amount of greenish yellowish goo at the tip of the 50ml tubes

    Hope this will be a warning and of help to people with new (thermochill) rads, to do a thorough cleaning, or end up like me
    Last edited by Navanod; 08-06-2008 at 06:31 PM.
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  2. #2
    Xtreme Cruncher
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    1,374
    You could always use a 22 micro filter or whatman paper . Sorry that happened!

    Which institution do you work at, what type of lab?

  3. #3
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    Quote Originally Posted by xVeinx View Post
    You could always use a 22 micro filter or whatman paper . Sorry that happened!

    Which institution do you work at, what type of lab?
    Filtration would be a royal pain with a syringe attachment since I do not want to use the lab's vacuum pumps
    Reason being, that I work at a biomedical research lab...don't want some exotic bacteria or tumor cells growing in my PC ICE

    edit: wait, just saw that its 22 micron LOL. I'm used to 0.3 micron filters (takes out those nasty bacteria), which will take forever to filter. Let me see if I can find any 22 micron paper, no harm giving that bottle one additional round of cleaning

    Institute...? Would my boss read XS?
    Last edited by Navanod; 08-06-2008 at 07:07 PM.
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  4. #4
    Xtreme Cruncher
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    1,374
    Quote Originally Posted by Navanod View Post
    Institute...? Would my boss read XS?
    I was just curious where you worked, wasn't sure if it was at a university or a biotech. That's all

  5. #5
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    Quote Originally Posted by xVeinx View Post
    I was just curious where you worked, wasn't sure if it was at a university or a biotech. That's all

    kinda OT, but its a University lab. Actually, its two University's lab since its a shared venture

    I shall keep the names to myself for now...just in case
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  6. #6
    Wanna Pull My Finger?
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Oklahoma
    Posts
    3,648
    one way to swap your tubing out is get a long rod and fasten a cotton ball on the end wet it down and run it through the tube just like cleaning a rifle.
    Donate to Xtreme Systems!

    Now Showing:
    Gigabyte x48-DQ6, Q6600,OCZ 1066 Reapers,2 750gb seagate 7200.11 hd, BFG 8800GTS 512,PC P&C 750 Quad psu, 24" Sceptre lcd, Antec 900

    my wife's system now!
    Intel C2D 6400, Zotac Matx mobo, 1gb kingston mem, Nvidia 7050, I Feel really Good now!
    Jon C2D 6600 Zotac mobo 1gb mem............................................... ................. HTPC qx6700@3.0ghz
    Annabelle Amd 3800+@2.4ghz, Biostar mobo, 1gb ocz pc4500 beta's................. Optyx2 opty165@ 2.1 ghz

    'Want a real high?
    Come crunch WCG and you'll feel like your on QuadCaine"



    First loops are like first sex, all hands and thumbs till you figure out what goes where, then it's what ever works best for you.

  7. #7
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,392
    Quote Originally Posted by Navanod View Post

    kinda OT, but its a University lab. Actually, its two University's lab since its a shared venture

    I shall keep the names to myself for now...just in case
    You mean that isn't you in the picture Seems your PC Ice is good enough to drink Now. Mighty fine cleaning
    ******************************************
    Respec'
    System:Bunch of crappy overclocked PC's that cost an arm and a leg


  8. #8
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oklahoma
    Posts
    1,212
    Man you guys scare me.

    I wonder if the running/flushing hot water actually loosens up
    Some of the flux shistuff.

    All i ever do is hold the in/outs of the radiator about 3 inches from
    the fuacet and let the water flowthru while looking to see how it
    looks coming out, and for only about a minute or two.

    Then i slap it together.
    I have never had any kinda of discoloration(except for some blue silicone looking junk) in my apogee cpu block which came from my CM hydra gpu cooler.


    _______________
    Q66@3.8ghz
    Rampage/Maximus SE hybrid W/C. 4 gigs OCZ reapers.
    4890,s CF Dual loop rocketfish case.
    ^^^^^All shaken, (from the earthquake) not stirred^^^^^


    Quote Originally Posted by Vapor View Post
    There's a lot less voodoo in watercooling than is assumed
    The only thing future proof in electronics, is the electricity itself.

    Any one who relies on only one source of information is a fool.

  9. #9
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    Quote Originally Posted by RADCOM View Post
    You mean that isn't you in the picture Seems your PC Ice is good enough to drink Now. Mighty fine cleaning


    No that isn't me!

    http://images.google.com.sg/images?h...-8&sa=N&tab=wi

    he's a Hong Kong star from the 1980's


    LOL at my sig one more time!!

    The PC ICE is clean but goodness knows what's dissolved in it now...can't clean out soluables using centrifugation
    Last edited by Navanod; 08-06-2008 at 07:59 PM.
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  10. #10
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    Quote Originally Posted by fart_plume View Post
    one way to swap your tubing out is get a long rod and fasten a cotton ball on the end wet it down and run it through the tube just like cleaning a rifle.
    Thanks, will try that out since one of the longer tubing is still not 100% clean (couldn't reach the middle portion with the brush)

    Speaking of rifles...I wish I still had that 3 piece rod back from my old army days (all males here have to serve 2.5 yrs in the army from the age of 18 )

    That'll make pulling through tubings real easy
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  11. #11
    Banned
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, Tx.
    Posts
    760
    heh, yeah, rifle/shotgun cleaning kits are real easy to get here in the states, $10 at any Walmart. Dunno bout over there. Best thing is, you can get 2 of them, and clean even the longest run of tubing.

  12. #12
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    A day of flushing with multiple hot water, alcohol and running water cycles and still the darn thing is releasing flux particles (visible by shining a torch light into the water)
    How much flux is in that darn radiator?! To think I had already removed so much by using it in my loop for all these time!
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  13. #13
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Sweden
    Posts
    79
    I'm having the same problem. Before I assembled my loop I went overkill on the cleaning just to make sure no flux was left in the radiator. About one hour of flushing with hot water straight out of the tap, two soaks with 99% Isopropyl, 10+ shake sessions with hot distilled water, 2 soaks with distilled. To no avail I'm afraid. One month after assembly the tubing started to cloud and after six months it was completely white.

    I disassembled the loop to try and clean it up. All parts of the loop had a white, powderish film which didn't dissolve with Isopropyl or hot water so I decided to see what vinegar could do. I put a piece of the tubing in a warm vinegar solution and indeed it reacted with the white stuff and cleaned the tubing pretty well. I cleaned the radiator using the same procedure as the first time but also added a vinegar flush since it did such a good job on the tubing. The result? Clouding after one week, completely white after a month

    Six months later on I have once again disassembled to make place for some new parts and the white stuff now has company with rust coloured stuff I've used nothing but distilled + one drop of PT Nuke btw and the liquid itself looks fairly clean. The inside of the radiator however, does not. The ends of the tubes have a white film and the end tank is covered by something I can only describe as rust. When I read about people just cleaning their PA's with a few rinses of hot distilled without any problems I can't believe we have the same radiator.
    CM Stacker STC-T01, Corsair HX620, ASUS P5Q-Deluxe, E8400 E0 @4.05/1.375v,
    Crucial Ballistix PC6400 @560/5-5-5-18/2.1v, HIS HD4870 w/ vmod.


    Laing D5 + EK X-TOP , D-TEK Fuzion w/ 4.5mm nozzle, D-TEK Fuzion GFX w/ "Saltshaker" mod,
    Thermochill PA120.3, 1/2" 3/4" Tygon B-44-4X.

  14. #14
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    Good grief...could this be the main reason for clouding? hahaha
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  15. #15
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    London, UK
    Posts
    575
    Just speaking from experience, I actually believe that it wasn't the flux inside the TC rad that was breaking up and entering your coolant, but actually the biocide/corrosion inhibitor additives precipitation out as it reacts with your tubing.

    To give you an example:

    I had ordered 2 TC PA120.3, and both went through 30 minutes of hot water running through them. Nothing exotic.
    One loop, cooling my 2 VGAs, after running exclusively with Innovatek protect IP, for 3 months, the tubing was clear as it was the first day, with VERY slight yellowing, only visible when compared with new, unused tubing. The tubing used was Innovatek 10/8mm.

    The other loop, cooling only the CPU, was a different story. Because I wanted to place the radiator near the window, I had to buy extra tubing as the window was about 3 meter from my PC, and I only had a little of the Innovatek tubing left. so from the Res-Pump-CPU block I used the Innovatek tubing, but the rest was some cheap Alphacool PVC ones. In the same 3 month period, the Alphacool tubing was coated with the white precipitate, and bits of it was floating inside the reservoir, whilest the Innovatek tubing part was clear and spotless. After I had attained some more of the Innov tubing, no more white gunk was seen ever since.

    So maybe it wasn't the leftover flux after all. My first rad, a black ICE, ran fine with tygon tubing and all, no white gunk whatsoever, but after a month I was told I needed to add some corrosion inhibitor-biocide, I did, and after a few days the tubing became cloudy...

    I really do think the corrosion inhibitors/biocides are coming out of solution, or are reacting with the tubing, forming the precipitate. And once the thickness start to build up, it gets flushed into your reservoir. You can try just pure distilled water, no nuke, no additives, and see if you still get the clouding, or how bad it was compared with additives.

    I of course can be wrong, or if you think I don't know anything and are dead set in your view, please ignore this post. However, you may looking in the wrong place for your issue, and are chasing ghost. Good luck, and hope this helps!


    Quote Originally Posted by creidiki View Post
    We are a band of fearless modern-day alchemists who, for fun, run solutions through sophisticated, if overpriced, separator setups, and then complain when we succeed in separating said solution.

  16. #16
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    482
    erm...if I'm only flushing the rad, without tubings?

    What you've described may be plasticizer clouding...
    Quote Originally Posted by HaCKs View Post
    Thanks for the info crazy asian guy with interesting hair.
    Quote Originally Posted by Martinm210 View Post
    There are alot of great testers in these forums and my one wish is for people to quit the bickering and post trolling and start testing and sharing of information.

    Water cooling is supposed to be recreational, it's not mandatory, and it's not a perfect science.

  17. #17
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    London, UK
    Posts
    575
    Quote Originally Posted by Navanod View Post
    erm...if I'm only flushing the rad, without tubings?

    What you've described may be plasticizer clouding...
    Don't understand your first sentence...

    And no, otherwise it wouldn't have gotten into the reservoir.


    Quote Originally Posted by creidiki View Post
    We are a band of fearless modern-day alchemists who, for fun, run solutions through sophisticated, if overpriced, separator setups, and then complain when we succeed in separating said solution.

  18. #18
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    I'am were I'm at
    Posts
    173
    I'm glad I didn't buy That Rad.

    For all of the performance gains, it seems like a Royal PITA. I'll gladly sacrifice a little performance for some peace of mind
    Coolermaster Cosmos S
    BenQ 241w
    Asus Chrosshair II
    OCZ Reaper HPC Edition 4GB
    Gigabyte Oden 1200w psu
    AMD Phenom 9950BLK@ 3000
    Swiftech MCP355, D-TEK FuZion v2
    Tygon B-44-4x,XSPC Dual Bay Res.
    SAMSUNG Spinpoint F1 1TB
    Radeon HD 4870 X2
    Black Ice GT Stealth 360 XFlow

    Bada Bing Bada Boom

  19. #19
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    1,565
    Quote Originally Posted by Navanod View Post
    Good grief...could this be the main reason for clouding? hahaha
    Id bet on it.

    After reading what most people (even the stickied ones) suggest and do, its just simply not enough.

    You can Not get these rads perfectly clean from adding water and shaking alone.

    BTW eternal_fantasy, the rust you see, is it on the outside? If so that IS rust, TC rads have a steel casing and with that CRAPPY quality matte non sealing paint, it lets water soak RIGHT THROUGH it and contact the steel, meaning any water spilled on the rad casing itself will cause some surface rust to come up through the paint. Its a radiator that you cant get wet on the outside... Awesome design, Definitely worth not having to spend 5-8 bucks more for stainless sheet metal...
    Last edited by Zaskar; 08-07-2008 at 05:19 AM.
    EVGA X58 Classified
    Intel i7 965
    Corsair Dominator 1600mhz 3x2gb
    Nvidia GTX 295

  20. #20
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    5,855
    Why can't Thermochill bloody sell clean radiators? I would gladly pay $20 more per radiator to avoid this whole hassle of flux and flushing.

  21. #21
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    5,855
    Quote Originally Posted by Navanod View Post
    Thanks, will try that out since one of the longer tubing is still not 100% clean (couldn't reach the middle portion with the brush)

    Speaking of rifles...I wish I still had that 3 piece rod back from my old army days (all males here have to serve 2.5 yrs in the army from the age of 18 )

    That'll make pulling through tubings real easy
    I still have the exact same good old three-piece rod, which I brought with me half way around the world. Remember flannelite... its amazing for cleaning tubes.. my brother shipped me some..

    You can also use a piece of rattan.. a cane comes to mind.
    Last edited by IanY; 08-07-2008 at 05:45 AM.

  22. #22
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Sweden
    Posts
    79
    Quote Originally Posted by Zaskar View Post
    BTW eternal_fantasy, the rust you see, is it on the outside?
    I guess that was my post you were referring to. No, it's on the inside.
    CM Stacker STC-T01, Corsair HX620, ASUS P5Q-Deluxe, E8400 E0 @4.05/1.375v,
    Crucial Ballistix PC6400 @560/5-5-5-18/2.1v, HIS HD4870 w/ vmod.


    Laing D5 + EK X-TOP , D-TEK Fuzion w/ 4.5mm nozzle, D-TEK Fuzion GFX w/ "Saltshaker" mod,
    Thermochill PA120.3, 1/2" 3/4" Tygon B-44-4X.

  23. #23
    I am Xtreme
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Netherlands
    Posts
    6,421
    Quote Originally Posted by IanY View Post
    Why can't Thermochill bloody sell clean radiators? I would gladly pay $20 more per radiator to avoid this whole hassle of flux and flushing.

    I bet they don't know how to clean them properly themselves.
    Asus Crosshair V Formula-Z | FX 8350 | 2x4GB Trident-X 2600 C10 | 2x ATI HD5870 Crossfire | Enermax Revo 1050watt | OCZ Vertex 3 60GB | Samsung F1 1TB

    Watercooling: XSPC Raystorm | EK 5870 Delrin fullcover | TFC X-changer 480 w/ 4x Gentle Typhoon | DDC2+ Delrin top | EK 200mm res | Primochill LRT 3/8 tubing

    Case: Murdermodded TJ-07

    sub 9 sec. SPi1M 940BE 955BE 965BE 1090T

  24. #24
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    5,855
    So, it rusts on the inside and outside

  25. #25
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    5,855
    Quote Originally Posted by Zeus View Post
    I bet they don't know how to clean them properly themselves.
    Hahahahaha

Page 1 of 5 1234 ... 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
  •