Thursday, November 11th 2010
Danger Den Intros Pair of GeForce GTX 580 Full-Coverage Water Blocks
Water-cooling specialist Danger Den is ready with a full-coverage water block for NVIDIA's recently introduced GeForce GTX 580 graphics card, tailored to fit the NVIDIA reference PCB. The DD-GTX580 from Danger Den uses a monolithic copper base and black chrome top. It is available in two variants depending on the base finish: mirrored, and satin copper, which are priced at US $146.95 and $134.95, respectively. Weighing in at 3.20 lbs (1.45 kg), the block cools all critical components, including the GPU, memory chips, and VRM on the obverse side of the PCB.
20 Comments on Danger Den Intros Pair of GeForce GTX 580 Full-Coverage Water Blocks
Goodbye motherboard!
...that cases have screws and holes for you to screw down the cards?
Now you know!
As your name is pron inspector could i assume you meant fleshlights? :laugh:
There really is anything and everything out there in some form.
... so I get that ~$550 for a CPU+GPU water-cooling setup is normal? ... :wtf:
... now on the other hand; flash lights are definitely a recreational hobby ;) ...
I wish Nvidia/AMD would give their PCB design out to watercooling companies like DD, Bitspower, EK, and all the rest to have blocks ready for sale on release day. Granted they arnt too far behind but some people want Liquid Cooling the same day.
But you are right, there is some insanely powerful lasers around and ones you can make yourself that would make for a great hobby... although i know me and to be honest i would like to keep my sight :roll:
For now i shall try and ignore all things i could spend money on until the 6970 comes out and hope that it's around the power of the 580 but cheaper :D
The Lian Li PC-C50
and you can check my system specs which tell you what I have in mind to build.
What do you think?
My initial thinking was to build it going with air-cooling first and check the temperatures, but I'm a bit puzzled at the moment because I'm worried that it'll be difficult to integrate a water-cooling loop later on to this case. Maybe I should find a different case that will fit in the tight space under my TV yet facilitate water cooling using 360mm radiator.
I'll have to do yet more research it seems! :ohwell:
As I said, tempteratures will be higher than a less cramped case, but still acceptable, and certainly not high enough to cause any damage to components or shorten their lifes.