Who/what company can I contact for a test and review sample?![]()
Who/what company can I contact for a test and review sample?![]()
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
Curse'd language barrier. >.<
oooh, exciting.
Lol @ funky test pics!
Translate the page with google
Last edited by joecop120; 12-09-2008 at 04:26 PM. Reason: + info
"Two pentium 4's would make a great miniature George Forman grill!"
http://heatware.com/eval.php?id=58394
hmmmm
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How does the Zern PQ+ perform relative to the EK Supreme or Swiftech GTZ? If I read those charts right it is about 1C better than the Zern with really low power fans. Seriously 8dBA? What is the point to those fans?
"Everything is amazing and nobody is happy".
- Louis CK
Any thinner and it'd be direct-die cooling. Aah, the old days of glueing plastic caps on Cyrix 6x86s...
--Matt
My Rig :
Core i5 4570S - ASUS Z87I-DELUXE - 16GB Mushkin Blackline DDR3-2400 - 256GB Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme
Any users?
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
"fightoffyourdemons"
Daily Desktop Custom Built - Modified Data General Server Case
Asus M4A79T Deluxe | 955BE C2 Rev | 4GB OCZ DDR 2000 @ 1600 6 5 6 1T | 4850x2 + 4850 w/MCW60 | CPU on H20 w/ Enzo Sapphire l Custom Built Pump and Res Combo 1/2 Gallon! | 4 Swiftech 320mm Rads with 6 All Aluminum Delta Fans with their own PSU - Finger Loppers - for real!
Literally, CPU&GPUs are almost always at ambient therefore heat ain't limiting sh|t.
People ave made them but they are far to risky to ever be sold through retail channels.
Also to get the best heat dissipation you need to mill some kind of fin/pin grid into the ihs as running water over the smooth IHS would in all likelihood perform worse than a good non direct die block.
Originally Posted by Chruschef in regards to Thermaltake water cooling
See that does make sense to me, because you are saying that water directly on the IHS does not conduct heat as well as a heat sync pressed ontop of the IHS with pins... That cannot be correct, it's got to be due to surface area and the lack of with the direct concept. You could compensate so that by bringing the "ceiling" down closer to the IHS after the water enters the area, creating higher pressure in the block.
Daily Desktop Custom Built - Modified Data General Server Case
Asus M4A79T Deluxe | 955BE C2 Rev | 4GB OCZ DDR 2000 @ 1600 6 5 6 1T | 4850x2 + 4850 w/MCW60 | CPU on H20 w/ Enzo Sapphire l Custom Built Pump and Res Combo 1/2 Gallon! | 4 Swiftech 320mm Rads with 6 All Aluminum Delta Fans with their own PSU - Finger Loppers - for real!
Literally, CPU&GPUs are almost always at ambient therefore heat ain't limiting sh|t.
Actually from what I just checked out, copper is around 800 times better at conducting heat than water so... http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/th...ity-d_429.html I need to work out some numbers. And, it should not be that hard to get the concept right so it's no more risky than a standard LC system. I'm sure people felt the same way about the risks when the accepted LC systems were first proposed.
Has anyone ever tried adding super fine grains of copper to their loops?? If enough of it was in the loop and did not clog anything that should dramatically increase thermal conductivity and the greatly increase the rate of heat transfer.
Last edited by chris.y2k.r1; 12-26-2008 at 12:25 PM.
Daily Desktop Custom Built - Modified Data General Server Case
Asus M4A79T Deluxe | 955BE C2 Rev | 4GB OCZ DDR 2000 @ 1600 6 5 6 1T | 4850x2 + 4850 w/MCW60 | CPU on H20 w/ Enzo Sapphire l Custom Built Pump and Res Combo 1/2 Gallon! | 4 Swiftech 320mm Rads with 6 All Aluminum Delta Fans with their own PSU - Finger Loppers - for real!
Literally, CPU&GPUs are almost always at ambient therefore heat ain't limiting sh|t.
I think that would add to the viscocity of the cooling solution and add more work to the pump which might increase the heat dump of the pump.
That is an interesting idea though for better cooling properties of the cooling solution.
Crunch with us, the XS WCG team
The XS WCG team needs your support.
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Come join us,get that warm fuzzy feeling that you've done something good for mankind.
Components
Case: Cooler Master ATCS840/ PSU: Seasonic X750/
Mobo: Gigabyte GA-z68xp-ud4/ CPU: i5 2500k 4.2-4.8 GHz @ auto/
VGA: EVGA GTX570 SC 940, 1880, 4500 @ 1.1v (Lucid dGPU)/ Memory: 8 Gb G.Skill DDR3 1866
Storage: Corsair Force 3 120Gb SSD, Samsung 470 128Gb SSD, WD Scorpio Black 750 (Scythe Quiet Drive)
OSs: Win7 HP x86_64/ Kubuntu 11.04 x86_64
Cooling
CPU: Koolance CPU-370/ GPU: Koolance VID-NX580/ Rads: XSPC RX360, Swiftech MCR-220QP/ Pump: EK-DCP 2.2 (softmount)
Fans: 3x Noiseblocker m12-S1 @~500-750rpm, 3x Scythe GT 800 @~450-800RPM, Cooler Master 230mm (softmount) @300 RPM
Tubing: 3/8" x 5/8" Primochill LRT (black)
Fittings: Koolance compressions and 45/90 degree fittings
Certified Quiet PC Loony
if you people want test results for this still, I have one on the way and will be doing some heavy tests with it on a lapped q6600
[ Lian-Li V1000B // EP45-UD3P // E8400 // HD4870 ]
[ W/C by EK, MIPS, D-tek, Bitspower, Swiftech, XSPC]
[ Project LucentTide - WORKLOG! ]
This is sounding interesting......![]()
So mcoffey engineers Swiftech's water blocks? I too am intrigued by the idea of using water direct on the surface of the CPU.
As for the idea of dumping fine amounts of copper into the coolant, sounds like a king way to foul your pump, and increase the conductivity of your coolant for galvanic corrosion. Especially for those with silver kill coins and coils in their loops.
If it actually uses microchannels it will be the block I was anticipating since 2006.
Patriotism is the conviction that this country is superior
to all other countries because you were born in it.
-- George B. Shaw
Main Rig:
Q6600 G0 @3.7ghz 1.425V - EVGA 680i A1 (Vdroop mod) - 4GB G.Skill HZ DDR2-800 @1000mhz - EVGA 8800 Ultra SLI @710/2460mhz - 2x WD Raptor X 150GB RAID 0 - 2x WD 500GB RAID 1 - 1x WD 320GB eSATA External - SB X-Fi XtremeMusic - Enermax Galaxy DXX 1000W - NEC 16X DVD±RW DL - 2x Dell 2405FPW (Dual monitor w/ SLI!) - ATI Radeon X300 - MM U2-UFO Horizon
Dual loops:
D-Tek FuZion (Bowed) - PA120.3 - Dual DDC2+ w/ PT tops - Swiftech MicroRes - Distilled w/ Red UV dye
2x EK FC8800 - DD680i NB - PA120.2 - Dual DDC2+ w/ PT tops - Swiftech MicroRes - G11 UV
Temps: 28-29degC idle / 46-48degC load with MX-2! Pics of my build!
Dedicated Cruncher:
Lapped E6600 @3.6ghz - MSI P35 Platinum - 2GB Crucial Ballistix DDR2-800 @933mhz - MSI 8500GT - 320GB WD - Lapped Big Typhoon - Seasonic M12 700W
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