Sorry I should have been more specific, inertia has little to do with how water travels through branches in a parallel water cooling system. Because while traveling through the tubing the flow of the water is pretty much laminar, and in laminar flow situations according to the Navier-Stokes equation the fluid inertia factor can, for all intents and purposes, be considered zero and canceled out. In fact, inertia is very important in watercooling because it is fluid inertia that creates turbulent flow (the kind inside waterblocks that is so good at removing heat).
In determining which branch to travel through in a parallel loop it is pressure that is the largest deciding factor. When the water reaches the first waterblock it has two paths it can take. It can continue on to the last 2 waterblocks, or it can go through the first waterblock. There is less pressure to continue on to the other two blocks because they are in parallel and provide less restriction, so most of the water (about 2/3) will continue on to the final two blocks whereas the other third will travel to the first block. Then when it reaches the junction of the second waterblock it can continue on to the third or go through the second. The pressure from the third is roughly the same as the second, so the remaining water splits about equally between the two. The end result is about 1/3 of the flow moving through each block.
This is WAAAAAY off. Of course water is traveling through the waterblocks, it has nowhere else to go.
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