Last edited by Biffa; 07-14-2010 at 07:32 AM.
| Completed: Project "Simples" | Custom TJ07 | P67A-UD3 | 2600K | GTX460 | MCR320+MCR220 | DDC 18W+XSPC Res |
| In progress: Project "Weebeastie" | A70B | P6T7 WS | i7-970 | 4xGTX470 | PA120.3+RX240+TFC120 | XSPC Dual-Pump-BayRes |
| In progress: Project "Gemini" | PC-P80B | EVGA SR-2 | 2xX5650 | 7100GS | PA140.3 | EK DCP-4.0 |
Try to reflect in objective engineering and economic terms: The manufacturer knows what their product is going to be subjected to. As a result, the choice of a cooling solution is based on a set of specifications that includes cooling performance, form factor, cost as well as product liability. If the product cannot perform reliably or has a limited shelf life with the tools that are provided to the enthusiast consumer to overclock the card, then the product may become a serious liability.
You are correctly mentionning the hassle of having to deal with a dead card from your standpoint, but now put yourself in the position of a manufacturer who would have to deal with hundreds of failed cards.. it just would not make sense to expose itself to this kind of hassle for any manufacturer.
Not to say that it couldn't happen, after all mistakes are part of the fabric of our Society, but there should be a reasonable assumption that things are done the way they are because they work within the intended specification enveloppe.
In practical terms, our solution drops the VRM's temps under extreme conditions by ~ 30C's compared to stock with no noise penalty. This in itself extends the component life well beyond the original specs. There are other factors that may influence the product shelf life under extreme conditions, but excessive temperature of these components is not going to be one of them.
Thank you for thinking this thru, it is appreciated. I would only comment on your qualification of the potential users as being "beginners". I think on the contrary that people "in the know" (engineers for example, and certainly enthusiast users by extension) would appreciate the value of the argument I am presenting above.
For the record, I am in favor of rating products based on a set of objective as well as subjective features, but I think that it is important to put things in prospective with respect to the relative importance of the objective criteria. As it stands, my bona fide opinion as an engineer is that the VRM temp criterium should be placed in its proper context as opposed to being exploited for what I perceive to be marketing purposes of one kind or another.
CEO Swiftech
Gabe, you misunderstood, i don't mean that beginners are the entire potential market, but that rather the evga card would be a better option for beginners. I myself would have bought it given the choice and while I'm not as experienced as some members I'm by no means inexperienced. This is now my 4th watercooled build.
Well I got my 480 running on air with the fan set to 100% until I figure out what block to get. Good thing my headphones block most of the sound, this is a great reminder as to why it is worth the money to watercool!
So, I guess I should get my circuit changed over to 20A before I add a third GTX 480 and waterblocks. Anyone know how to go about this?
\Project\ Triple Surround Fury
Case: Mountain Mods Ascension (modded)
CPU: i7 920 @ 4GHz + EK Supreme HF (plate #1)
GPU: GTX 670 3-Way SLI + XSPC Razor GTX670 water blocks
Mobo: ASUS Rampage III Extreme + EK FB R3E water block
RAM: 3x 2GB Mushkin Enhanced Ridgeback DDR3 @ 6-8-6-24 1T
SSD: Crucial M4 256GB, 0309 firmware
PSU: 2x Corsair HX1000s on separate circuits
LCD: 3x ASUS VW266H 26" Nvidia Surround @ 6030 x 1200
OS: Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium
Games: AoE II: HD, BF4, MKKE, MW2 via FourDeltaOne (Domination all day!)
Call an Electrician, You may or may not need a city or county building permit to make alterations, You'll need at the very least a 20A breaker and a 20A Outlet, plus a 12 gauge cable, Local building codes apply of course, Here We use Romex(Some places require Armored cable by code of course), I have Romex cable for My PC, Although I do need to move the outlet closer to My PC one of these days. I'd taken out a troublesome 60A 230v breaker and outlet and reused the 10 gauge cable for two 20A circuits, the 10 gauge cable feeds into two 12 gauge cables and works rather nicely. One circuit has My swamp cooler on It and the other has My PC on It. I hope this helps some. I'm not an Electrical Contractor, I just have experience in having had this done.
Last edited by JokerCPoC; 07-14-2010 at 02:05 PM.
PC1: QX6700 _B1(ES) cpu @ 2.98GHz, Asus P5K Deluxe(812 Bios) w/one GTX295 card...
PC1(Replacement): i5 750 cpu @ 2.66GHz, Asus P7P55D Pro[Under Construction]
Couldn't wait anymore so ended up going to Microcenter and bought me the Danger Dan Block. only thing is they had satin copper, wonder if there are any good places in NJ where i can nickle plate the top part like yours and maybe some way to polish that bottom part. and yeah man i agree with you, this thing is heavy!! lol
http://www.heatware.com/eval.php?id=67041
Case: Silverstone Temjin TJ07B/MurderMod Faceplate/Serpentin Acrylic top.
PSU: Antec TPQ-1200w
Mobo: EVGA X58 SLI LE/EK-FB Block
CPU: Intel LGA 920 DO@4.1Ghz/EK Supreme block/Thermochill pa 120.4 Rad./EK 250 res/swiftech 350pmp
Ram: Corsair CMT6GX3M3A 1600C7 6gig
VGA: EVGA GTX 580/EK Block
HD: Western Digital 500gig
Sound: Creaive X-FI Titanium Fatal1ty Champion series
Yea nice block I got the Nickle top and bottom. It is heavier than it looks.
Guess when the results come out those that waited are going to be waiting for backorders.Part of the reason I went ahead with the DD block. I'm not pushing the system to max anyway but I wanted to be able to game and not sweat. Use to be 92c gaming and now i'm 54c gaming.
![]()
System specs
i7-930 H50 Msi x58pro 6 gigs of Crucial 40gig SSD 500gig Drive Evga GTX480 Cooled DD block Exos water
Kids comp.
X2 e8500 Giga p35 Ds3l 40gig SSD Hanns-g 22" lcd 4gigs of Crucial Ati 4870 Ocz powerstream 520
Kids comp.
x2 4400 2 gig of patriot 8800 gts
Haha! yea man, its funny you mentioned that. Thats exactly one of the reasons i bought it too.. freaking hot as hell here. lol
http://www.heatware.com/eval.php?id=67041
Case: Silverstone Temjin TJ07B/MurderMod Faceplate/Serpentin Acrylic top.
PSU: Antec TPQ-1200w
Mobo: EVGA X58 SLI LE/EK-FB Block
CPU: Intel LGA 920 DO@4.1Ghz/EK Supreme block/Thermochill pa 120.4 Rad./EK 250 res/swiftech 350pmp
Ram: Corsair CMT6GX3M3A 1600C7 6gig
VGA: EVGA GTX 580/EK Block
HD: Western Digital 500gig
Sound: Creaive X-FI Titanium Fatal1ty Champion series
I guess the important question here is, what temps are you guys getting on your VREGs, if you can record that temp?
\Project\ Triple Surround Fury
Case: Mountain Mods Ascension (modded)
CPU: i7 920 @ 4GHz + EK Supreme HF (plate #1)
GPU: GTX 670 3-Way SLI + XSPC Razor GTX670 water blocks
Mobo: ASUS Rampage III Extreme + EK FB R3E water block
RAM: 3x 2GB Mushkin Enhanced Ridgeback DDR3 @ 6-8-6-24 1T
SSD: Crucial M4 256GB, 0309 firmware
PSU: 2x Corsair HX1000s on separate circuits
LCD: 3x ASUS VW266H 26" Nvidia Surround @ 6030 x 1200
OS: Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium
Games: AoE II: HD, BF4, MKKE, MW2 via FourDeltaOne (Domination all day!)
Sorry this is slightly OT, but is there a FAQ on how to interpret those graphs? I checked the beginning of this forum with no luck.
Thanks.
English/Math Dictionary...?
Actually I sort of know how you feel I remember when I first read one. Just look at them long enough and once you see a few of them you will understand.![]()
The more I look the more I begin to understand!
Warning, your brain may vary and the results will be there waiting for you to put it all together!
I think the DD and the EK blocks will be side by side in the results once Skinnee is finished, but I believe the EK block will lower GPU temps better than the DD block!
-Systemlord
* My Case Labs STH10 Build Log *
Computer System:
CPU = Intel i7 3770K
MOBO = Asus Maximus V Extreme
GPU = EVGA GeForce GTX 480 @ 880MHz|1760MHz|4200MHz @ 1.125v
RAM = 8GB Dominator GT's
SSD = Samsung 830 Series 256GB
PSU = SeaSonic X-1250W
SC = X-Fi Fatality Pro
CASE = Case Labs STH10
LCD = NEC MultiSync 1970GX 19"
OS = Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
Watercooling System:
CPU = EK Supremacy Nickel+Acetal
GPU = EK FC-480 GTX Nickel+Acetal
MB = EK-FB Asus M5E Nickel+Acetal
RES = EK-RES X3 250
PUMP = Dual Koolance PMP-450's w/ EK-D5 Dual Top CSQ
RAD = Dual HWLabs SR-1 560's w/Gentle Typhoon 1850rpm Fans
LIQUID = Distilled Water w/Petra's Pure Silver Killcoil
Couldn't wait either over here so got an EK FC480. Worked out brilliant as it was my first time watercooling. Got the temps down from 78@load to now 43@load with 22 degree ambient. Clocks are Core:911; Shader:1822; Mem:2005(1002) and Voltage@1.125mV.
Even so, I'm still eagerly awating the results!
For the record, I am in favor of rating products based on a set of objective as well as subjective features, but I think that it is important to put things in prospective with respect to the relative importance of the objective criteria. As it stands, my bona fide opinion as an engineer is that the VRM temp criterium should be placed in its proper context as opposed to being exploited for what I perceive to be marketing purposes of one kind or another.[/QUOTE]
Well I bought two of the EVGA FTW cards and am very pleased with them. I thnk that the comnparatively light weight and single slot form factor are big pluses and my VRMs haven't fried yet (crosses fingers.) It seems like a reasonable risk to me though given the exceptional warranty offered on these by EVGA. Yes, it will be a PITA if I have to replace a card and it will cost me some time and money for shipping. EVGA on the other hand has to pay for someone to process the RMA, receive the part, credit my account and pick and ship a replacement. This is in addition to buying and assembling the replacement card. That's an expensive proposition for them and I doubt that they would offer that warranty unless they were reasonably certain that the failure rate will be very low. They could be wrong of course but the worst case scenario is that I'm out some time and money for shipping.
Tempted to go with EK blocks, but, for some paranoid reason, I just have to wait for these results. AARRGGHHH!
\Project\ Triple Surround Fury
Case: Mountain Mods Ascension (modded)
CPU: i7 920 @ 4GHz + EK Supreme HF (plate #1)
GPU: GTX 670 3-Way SLI + XSPC Razor GTX670 water blocks
Mobo: ASUS Rampage III Extreme + EK FB R3E water block
RAM: 3x 2GB Mushkin Enhanced Ridgeback DDR3 @ 6-8-6-24 1T
SSD: Crucial M4 256GB, 0309 firmware
PSU: 2x Corsair HX1000s on separate circuits
LCD: 3x ASUS VW266H 26" Nvidia Surround @ 6030 x 1200
OS: Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium
Games: AoE II: HD, BF4, MKKE, MW2 via FourDeltaOne (Domination all day!)
Intel Core i7-2600K---> Koolance 370
3 X EVGA 480 GTX SC's Watercooled--> Koolance VID-NX480 blocks, HWLabs GTX 480, Liang D5 Vario
Koolance RP-45X2 Reservoir
Corsair Obsidian 800D
Gigabyte GA-Z68X-UD7-B3 MB
SILVERSTONE ST1500 1500W PSU
16G CORSAIR DOMINATOR-GT (4 x 4GB) PC3 12800
2 X Kingston HyperX SH100S3B/120G SATA 3 in RAID 0
1 X WD Caviar Black 1TB
Dell 3007 WFP-HC
Z-5500's
Windows 7 64bit
The results being written on cake is a lie.....
I guess I'm just going EK unless there is an update in the next day or two, was hoping for some #'s while I was on vacation.
Nice 900th post in the thread![]()
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