Day 1 continued...
Removing the hot side temp sensor. Then I ran into two problems...
My phone battery was almost dead so I had to hook it up to this handy battery.
I was running out of plugs for the distroplate however I found two stuck in my old ASRock Master SLI/ac monoblock that was used from this original post.
It was still in fairly good shape but you can see there is some kind of corrosion going one on the right side.
Had to drain the liquid I left in there. Boom I got the 4 plugs I needed for the next step. Need to recover that RGB cable later.
Now onto removing the last four distroplate connections. This part I need to be careful because there will be fluid in the tubes.
Removing the tubes with QDC's used for the GPU and draining them into the bottle.
Next the radiator tubes. Most of the radiator was drained but I was taking no chances with it so I used the ends of the QDC's to plug the radiator tubes for now.
With the hardware removed finally I managed to recover a bit over 800 mL of fluid from the system.
Consulting with my checklist the motherboard removal was next before I can remove the rad.
Day 1 continued...
Motherboard removal.
I was fortunate to get the revised Taichi with the reoriented USBC header that didn't conflict with the GPU.
There was a bit of weaving between the power and USB3 header.
Put the board off to the side and checked some more boxes off the list.
Next radiator and distroplate removal but I have run out of time to post tonight.
Day 1 continued...
Lets take a break and look at the clearances. Those 3 top plugs tend to get in the way trying to remove the radiator. You can see in the 2nd screenshot how close the rad is to the distroplate potentially making any surface mounted sound dampening problematic. I found a solution and we will see this later on day 3 reassembly.
Before I remove the radiator I need to disconnect and unbundle the fan wiring and take out those plugs.
I've misplaced the allen key so iFix-IT to the rescue.
I mighty fine zip tie job I think.
Let's take off those fans and see how dirty the rad has gotten.
Got the fans cleaned up with the datavac and set aside. Took a look at the screw clearance of the old rad. Pretty big gap for screws if needed compared to the new rad.
After giving the rad a quick dusting with the datavac lets get those hoses off. I will later wash the rad with a garden hose and let dry.
Next removal of those other fans and I need to undo some more zip ties for the distroplate RGB cable.
With the cables and zip ties out of the way I can take a quick look and dry fit the new rad.
Next preparing to remove the distroplate.
I've already maxed out on posting picture quota for the moment. To be continued...
... continued
Next preparing to remove the distroplate. There are 5 screws to remove and I need to be really careful about the RGB cable because it's in a pinch point with the case.
Popping out the distroplate.
Heavy angle needed. Looks like I missed catching some drops at some point that wicked under the distoplate.
Distroplate is out. It's difficult to see in the photo but there looks to be a chalky white outline around the inside of the gaskets which is the reason I am taking it apart for cleaning.
It appears the RGB cable is a bit squished but not damaged.
With the distroplate removed let's examine the surface area of the case to see what I might be able to do about applying any sound dampening.
On one side there are recessed holes so it will not be possible to use washers here. On the other side it's flat. The top and bottom front mounted surfaces are recessed so there is no contact there. The bottom is flat as well.
Now to finish removing the read/side fans but yet more zip tie work needs to be undone.
Finally teardown is complete
So where was I on the checklist? Still day one and plenty more to do. I decide to call an audible and jump to the CPU swap and combine some tasks.
to be continued...
Day 1 continued...
Now that disassembly is complete I need to swap my CPU's. Going back in time at the start of this thread you will recall my ASRock Master SLI/ac blew up and my 5950x CPU - got twice baked - but not quite fried. So I got the Taichi X570 replacement however I was unable to run 128GB of RAM successfully. More accurately it would run fine even under stress tests it but the system would reboot when idle and reducing frequency, UEFI/BIOS updates, and adjusting voltages didn't seem to help, also ASRock never replied to my support request regarding the RAM I am using. So was my chip damaged? Now we can find out. I have a spare PC that I also use as my gaming PC with a new 5950x from December 2022 so I'm going to swap the CPU's so I can test later if the problem has to do with the CPU.
Enough with the backstory on with the show...
Humm looks like my last pasting job didn't quite work out as I thought. This was Thermal Grizzly paste that came with my EK Velocity block.
Seems a bit thin and at the thinnest part a bit cooked.
backplate removal
Let's get this block cleaned up
Onto the CPU
Next.... Getting the CPU out of my NR200P