Thanks!
Update the op with some additional pictures of the interior and one with compression fittings on there...
Thanks!
Update the op with some additional pictures of the interior and one with compression fittings on there...
ths is a great block..i cant wait to see your extended testing results!
although i have a fuzion v2 im actually considering switching to a GTZ mainly because of it wider barb spacing (having trouble on the v2 with 1/2" ID tubing and zip ties..) and because of its sexy looks)
Intel Q6600 @ 3.6GHz
Asus Blitz Formula SE
OCZ ReaperX PC6400 2x2GB
Sapphire HD4870x2
X-Fi Elite Pro 7.1 & Logitech Z5500
Samsung Spinpoint T166 500GB
Samsung 226BW
Zalman ZM1000-HP
Watercooling
Loop 1: DDC3.2 (XSPC Restop), Fuzion v2, BIGTX360 (6x S-Flex F)
Loop 2: DDC3.2 (XSPC Restop), EK 4870x2, TFC X360 (3x S-Flex F)
Loop 3: to come
[DarthBeavis] "I am gonna try to mod one of these into my wife so can get an early warning of when she gets angry . . ."
Thats good to know they are the same.
Would the quad insert help for a quad or would it matter much?
i7 920 on Gigabyte UD5 X58
Mugen 2
Seagate 500gb. 7200.12 + Seagate 750Gb 7200.11
Samsung LN40A650 - GTX260
Samsung sh-203n
Cruial D9JNM 2 x 3gb 2100mhz
7 ultimate 64
All housed in custom painted Coolermaster stacker 832 powered by Silverstone's DA 800
Hey martin.
How about doing the exact same test.
Only with say a swiftech 220 radiator?
_______________
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^^^^^
The only thing future proof in electronics, is the electricity itself.
Any one who relies on only one source of information is a fool.
I'm going to try it again when I go into round two, but this was intended to test straight out of the box as shipped without buying any accessories. My first round of testing I had problems with because of ambients was however showing the quad midplate performing worse than stock. Swiftech's published results show performance of the 4.5mm nozzle which was the best for them. D-Tek noted that some of the nozzles are finicky about installation and some are better for different types of quads, etc. But they also suggested trying the red quad nozzle, it may be helpful for the Kentsfield.
Sorry, it's incredibly time consuming and I've already tested the MCR220. If you want an estimate you can use my MCR220 radiator estimator and estimate your water delta. My testing here with the TFC480 resulted in about a 2.5degree delta, so for a rough number just add the difference from 2.5 degrees. That's not going to be a perfect number though because as the processor gets hotter, it produces more heat. I purposely chose the TFC480 for two reasons, one is because it's a quad rad and I can then use all 8 of my air in sensors and 4 air out sensor. In addition the larger radiator reaches equillibrium much faster than the higer delta of a small radiator, so 10 minutes is enough time for warmup.
Ok cool.
I have never gotten around to taking my Tc320 off and testing my ST220.
I did do it in the reverse order with the same sys only difference was the two radiators.
I wouldnt figure there would be much difference anyway.
Pretty much anyone running a cpu and gpu on a 220 radiator or larger, one wouldnt see a very big drop in temps.
Now of course if one ran an SLI/CrossFire set-up plus a cpu then i could see a 220 style or smaller radiator posing problems.
Anyway thanks always for the test and feedback.
_______________
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^^^^^
The only thing future proof in electronics, is the electricity itself.
Any one who relies on only one source of information is a fool.
Yeah, probably not going to be more than a couple of degrees differeence depending on the fans use.
The interesting thing I found with my CPU block testing is the .2 to .3C error I was fighting before I fixed my ambient problem. The hotter the processor, the more heat it produces, so a couple of degrees hotter water temperature might translate into a little more than that after you figure in the extra processor heat that's coming out. It's very complex in how it all works, and interesting.
One thing to think about is as the cpu/waterblock/NB/memory, all watercooled or some watercooled.
Will raise the avg/overall temps on the mobo as a whole, and heat will spread over a givin area.
Even more so with the sys under load.
And give a good 1/4 or more of a degree variance in testing.
Ambient heat so too speak.
Does that make any sense?
IMO something like a thermal camera with time recorded video of said sys
from idle to full load would best show when/where and how the heat spreads.
Plus case airflow and fan orientation would also be a big factor for that type of test.
But then again that is a whole nother hair pulling, long, time consuming, lots of drinking and expensive test in it-self.![]()
_______________
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^^^^^
The only thing future proof in electronics, is the electricity itself.
Any one who relies on only one source of information is a fool.
QX 9650 | Maximus II Formula | G.SKILL 4GB (2 x 2GB) PC2 8500 | Sapphire 4850 X2 2GB| Auzen X-Fi Prelude 7.1 | 3x's WD 150GB Raptors & 2x's 1TB Seagate 7200.11 | Silverstone OP1200 | SilverStone TJ07 | Dell 2707WFP
EK-RES 250 --> Swiftech MCP655 --> Apogee GTZ --> Enzotech Sapphire NB --> Feser X-Changer 360
![]()
Thanks for all your effort martin!
I have a question, as can be seen there's a 0.4 GPM gap between the FuZion and the GTZ. Now, according to your flow estimator (), the following system:
FuZion V2
MCW60
2x MCR320 QP
D5
1x Res
6ft. 7/16" tubing
would yield 1.53 GPM. Let's replace the FuZion with a GTZ. 1.53-0.4 = 1.13 GPM.
Isn't it a big difference? I'm afraid 1.13 is not that good, esp. for future upgrades. What would be best for the above setup?
Thanks ^^
- Case : Silverstone TJ07 Black
- Sound : Asus Xonar Essence STX
- Video : Asus GTX 680 4gb w/ Ek Nickel Block
- Board : ASUS Maximus V Formula Z77
- CPU : Core i5-3570K @ 4.5 Ghz
- CPU Cooler : EK-Supreme HF w/Plexi Top
- Memory : 16GB Samsung 2133mhz 10-9-10-29
- PSU: Enermax Revolution 85+ 1050w
- HDD : Crucial 250gb M4 Raid 0
- Radiator : Thermochill PA 120.3
- Reservoir : EK-Multioption Res 250 Rev.2
- Water Pump : Laing DDC-3.2 w/XSPC Top
While having a target flow rate is somewhere to start, the more I've been playing with this CPU block setup where I get the full picture, the more complex I'm seeing this pump heat issue becoming.
For each CPU block tested I'm recording flow rates, but also water and air temperatures. What I'm noticing is that even with the same pump, the more restrictive blocks have a lower water temperature. Even with the TFC 480, I'm seeing around .1C hotter water with the more free flowing blocks.
So in the end you might have higher flow rates, but also hotter water temperatures. The question then becomes, which is better or worse or does the end resulting performance on your other blocks better or worse.
In the end I think there is probably some sort of "Optimal" flow rate to shoot for and it's going to be a function of pump heat dump.
It's all splitting hairs at this point to the point it really doesn't make a difference in the real world, but I'm not entirely sure running a system at 2GPM with a known pump would be better than say undervolting the pump to 1 or 1.5GPM. I'm not really sure what to shoot for at this point but I know the differences are very small above 1GPM.
wow umm this is very interesting... id like to find out what the optimal gpm is for water cooling?
.1°C hotter water for a free flowing block?......I think I can live with that.![]()
![]()
Circles SucQ!
If your annoyed by sigs telling you to put things in your sig, then put this in your sig
Bribery won't work on me...just say NO to AT!!!
It's all moot...
I feel like I'm with my buddy's racing bikes on the dunes. We get all giddy about a carbon fiber clutch lever that cost $50 for a 2 ounce weight reduction. Never mind the 1/4 pounder with fries we ate for lunch, that 2 ounces makes all the difference.![]()
It's not as simple as that. The more restriction already in your loop, the less of an impact replacing the FuZion with the GTZ will have in terms of flow reduction. Look at the PQ-curve of the pump, it's not linear. If you could do what you did, adding enough blocks would make the water flow the other way.![]()
Wow! Great preview of these 2 super water blocks!
Guys, I need your help. U can see my liquid system i`m going to buy this week. I will use only 1 block in my system. And i`m going to swap my E3110 on Q9650 in future.
What is the best choice for me :
D-Tek FuZion v2
Aquacomputer cuplex XT di (G1/4")
Swiftech Apogee GTZ 775
Thanks in advance![]()
Intel Q9650 @500x9MHz/1,3V
Asus Maximus II Formula @Performance Level=7
OCZ OCZ2B1200LV4GK 4x2GB @1200MHz/5-5-5-15/1,8V
OCZ SSD Vertex 3 120Gb
Seagate RAID0 2x ST1000DM003
XFX HD7970 3GB @1111MHz
Thermaltake Xaser VI BWS
Seasonic Platinum SS-1000XP
M-Audio Audiophile 192
LG W2486L
Liquid Cooling System :
ThermoChill PA120.3 + Coolgate 4x120
Swiftech Apogee XT, Swiftech MCW-NBMAX Northbridge
Watercool HeatKiller GPU-X3 79X0 Ni-Bl + HeatKiller GPU Backplate 79X0
Laing 12V DDC-1Plus with XSPC Laing DDC Reservoir Top
3x Scythe S-FLEX "F", 4x Scythe Gentle Typhoon "15", Scythe Kaze Master Ace 5,25''
Apple MacBook Pro 17` Early 2011:
CPU: Sandy Bridge Intel Core i7 2720QM
RAM: Crucial 2x4GB DDR3 1333
SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256 GB SSD
HDD: ADATA Nobility NH13 1GB White
OS: Mac OS X Mavericks
So, which would make the best bet?
a. GTZ resulting in approx. 1.1GPM and 0.1c colder water temp
b. FuZion resulting in approx. 1.5GPM and 0.1c warmer water temp?
The FuZion seems like a safer candidate.. although they're both good choices and top performers.
That curve? It's very close to be linear actually
Btw, martin used DDC3.2+XSPC top in the GTZ-FuZion testing, didn't he? the flow rate decline with a D5 should be even bigger.
Any advices?
Intel Q9650 @500x9MHz/1,3V
Asus Maximus II Formula @Performance Level=7
OCZ OCZ2B1200LV4GK 4x2GB @1200MHz/5-5-5-15/1,8V
OCZ SSD Vertex 3 120Gb
Seagate RAID0 2x ST1000DM003
XFX HD7970 3GB @1111MHz
Thermaltake Xaser VI BWS
Seasonic Platinum SS-1000XP
M-Audio Audiophile 192
LG W2486L
Liquid Cooling System :
ThermoChill PA120.3 + Coolgate 4x120
Swiftech Apogee XT, Swiftech MCW-NBMAX Northbridge
Watercool HeatKiller GPU-X3 79X0 Ni-Bl + HeatKiller GPU Backplate 79X0
Laing 12V DDC-1Plus with XSPC Laing DDC Reservoir Top
3x Scythe S-FLEX "F", 4x Scythe Gentle Typhoon "15", Scythe Kaze Master Ace 5,25''
Apple MacBook Pro 17` Early 2011:
CPU: Sandy Bridge Intel Core i7 2720QM
RAM: Crucial 2x4GB DDR3 1333
SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256 GB SSD
HDD: ADATA Nobility NH13 1GB White
OS: Mac OS X Mavericks
Sorry I've been absent... great job Martin as always. It's been too hot for me to test, actually I've done one run the the GTZ but with these high ambients, I won't do it. People are now beginning to understand the consequences of pump heat, this 'OMGWTFBBQ I NEED TEH UBER FLOWZRATEZ' is laughable. Sure more flow is always better, the caveat is that it comes with the cost of increased heat, which, 9 times out of 10 will send your temps backwards. I still can't believe that no one has made a PD pump or a screw pump for our application, would own all centrifugal pumps like $2 ho's![]()
*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*
GTZ --> MCW-NBMAX --> EK FC --> PA 120.3 --> PA 160.1 --> 2x DDC Ultras in Series --> Custom Clear Res
"Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity."
*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*'``'*:-.,_,.-:*
Great review, comforting to know that my Fuzion v2 is still a great purchase. I will just yank the quad mid-plate when I get a chance (I'll disassemble the whole loop soon for maintenance and cleanup).
Bookmarks