You're ignoring the details of your own link to make a really incorrect assumption. The cooling capability of any loop is a choice one makes. The test from Igor's is limited by its cooling, DUH. This is just like your average at best loop, it's your choice too make a poor loop just like Igor's is not really a test of the loop in general but of the limited cooling that he choice to use.
@Chrispy_ sums it up excellently above here, but just to reiterate: you're completely missing the point. What I said is that this card - the 3070 with the TUF heatsink with two NF-A12x25s on it - can likely perform on par with "most water cooled GPUs". Just for reference,
most water cooled GPUs are AIO cooled, and not in a custom loop. And AIO-equipped GPUs don't cool that well, and certainly not at low noise levels.
Look at the Asus 3080 Ti Strix LC - with a dedicated 240mm rad it runs at about 50°C, but at more than 41dBA -
way too noisy for me, and indeed among the noisiest on TPU's charts. The quiet BIOS is better, but still not particularly impressive. I would definitely expect this 3070 to be quieter than that GPU, and comparable in terms of thermals.
I'd also appreciate if you at least had the courtesy to keep civil and not drag us into some quasi-personal discussion of whether my loop is "poor" - you clearly have a pretty poor basis for making a judgement, and the only reason to take the discussion in that direction is if you want to derail this by making things personal. So, please don't? Also, since you clearly missed it (I'd suggest you go back and re-read some posts tbh): that I specifically wasn't talking about huge builds stuffed full of radiators was the first point I addressed:
It might be if you have one of those utterly overblown water cooling setups with 3+ large radiators and a dozen+ fans, but that isn't what I was comparing to.
Most water cooled GPUs aren't in massive showpiece builds. Most water cooled GPUs have, at best, a single 240 or 360mm rad to themselves. Many have a 120mm, though they've been moving to 240mm rads for most GPU AIOs in recent years. The point is: whatever it is you're comparing to, it isn't what I was comparing to, and the further you try to insist that the point
I made was based on
your examples, the more you make it clear that you're not here to have an actually interesting discussion.