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System Name | Univac SLI Edition |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Xeon 1650 V3 @ 4.2GHz |
Motherboard | eVGA X99 FTW K |
Cooling | EK Supremacy EVO, Swiftech MCP50x, Alphacool NeXXos UT60 360, Black Ice GTX 360 |
Memory | 2x16GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3000MHz |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia Titan X Tri-SLI w/ EK Blocks |
Storage | HyperX Predator 240GB PCI-E, Samsung 850 Pro 512GB |
Display(s) | Dell UltraSharp 34" Ultra-Wide (U3415W) / (Samsung 48" Curved 4k) |
Case | Phanteks Enthoo Pro M Acrylic Edition |
Audio Device(s) | Sound Blaster Z |
Power Supply | Thermaltake 1350watt Toughpower Modular |
Mouse | Logitech G502 |
Keyboard | CODE 10 keyless MX Clears |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
As long as you use 1 rad, you don't have much choice... You'll be dumping hot water from GPU on the CPU or the other way around.
Also, the water doesn't get enormously hot, especially with some good flowrate. That, and the saturation point of your loop stays the same, no matter in what order you put the components.
He has 2 rads though, so really no point to cool GPU and CPU in the same loop. I was always tought its best to avoid having both in the same loop unless you have an absurd amount of rad power going on and a high flowrate pump.