- Joined
- Mar 7, 2023
- Messages
- 1,036 (1.40/day)
Processor | 14700KF/12100 |
---|---|
Motherboard | Gigabyte B760 Aorus Elite Ax DDR5 |
Cooling | ARCTIC Liquid Freezer II 240 + P12 Max Fans |
Memory | 32GB Kingston Fury Beast @ 6000 |
Video Card(s) | Asus Tuf 4090 24GB |
Storage | 4TB sn850x, 2TB sn850x, 2TB Netac Nv7000 + 2TB p5 plus, 4TB MX500 * 2 = 18TB. Plus dvd burner. |
Display(s) | Dell 23.5" 1440P IPS panel |
Case | Lian Li LANCOOL II MESH Performance Mid-Tower |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech Z623 |
Power Supply | Gigabyte ud850gm pg5 |
Keyboard | msi gk30 |
TLDR down below
So, around christmas was the first time I saw a drop of liquid fall from my aio fan onto my gpu backplate. As soon as I turned my computer on, the fan spinning up displaced the tiny bit of liquid. At first I freaked out because I thought oh no my aio is leaking. But then I thought no that doesn't make any sense, the liquid would come from the tube, or where the tube connects to the radiator or the pump, right? Thats how I understand it anyway. Above the fan is just the just the rad... right? I checked the tube and connection points they look fine.
There's no shortage of gasses in this house that could liquefy. My computer is in the same room as the kitchen (its a big room and they are on opposite sides, but still) and both me and my room mate vape. I try to blow away from the computer but... I realize that does precious little as its definitely in the air. And its pretty cold this time of year. So I was thinking its some kind of gas that turned to liquid. Anyway I cleaned off both fans and the rad and nothing happened for a couple months ( the rad was bone dry btw). But recently I've had an additional droplet appear. I was able to wipe this one down before it fell. I should have thought to take a picture.... Too bad.
Does the steam from cooking or the vapour/aerosol from the vaping turning to liquid make sense? The only thing that bothers me about that is the drops have come from the same fan, and its the fan thats right next to where the tube connects. (Still don't really understand how liquid from the loop could get into the fan, especially that location of the fan, but that fact still makes me a little nervous.) Could just be that that fan sucks in more air since its also closer to the intake fans and thats the reason.
But then I ask myself why does it happen this winter and not last winter... perhaps its just due to differences in temperature?
I did clean the other fans and while the dust was not completely dry, they were far from developing a liquid like this. But they are also oriented differently, not blowing into a rad and different model fans.
Or.... could it maybe be like some machine oil used in the fan itself? I mean they do go up to 3300rpm and the second drop did seem to accumulate around the edge, near the whatchamacall it ring that connects to the blades. Perhaps between that thing (sorry can't think of the name) and the housing of the fan there is some type of lube to make things quiet in an event of some friction happening...? But then you'd think that would happen in the summer, not the winter. Or maybe its just a time thing. Fans have been running long enough that the lube is starting to succumb to gravity? Idk. I just hope its not some sort of leak. Don't know how it would be possible but still...
Oh and the color of the liquid is light brown, idk if any info can be gleaned from that. So... what do you guys think could be the cause?
Even now you should be able to see some moisture, this is where the last droplet appeared too. Its just a tiny bit now but it will become more in time, at least, thats what I believe will happen if the pattern continues.
TLDR: AIO fan is slowly accumulating droplets and I want to know why. I'm wondering if vapour in the air such as steam/oil from the kitchen or PG/VG from me and my room mate's vapes are possibly liquefying in the cold temperatures. Or if possibly some machine oil is to blame? Or could this somehow be the cooling solution meaning there's a leak? There's reasons I have to doubt all 3 of these... yet they are there so something is happening. I suppose the liquefaction would be the most likely in my estimation. But idk, I'm just some idiot
If it is machine oil, the p12 max is in stock ( not common on canadian amazon) and slightly below normal price. Now would be a good time to buy a replacement.
So, around christmas was the first time I saw a drop of liquid fall from my aio fan onto my gpu backplate. As soon as I turned my computer on, the fan spinning up displaced the tiny bit of liquid. At first I freaked out because I thought oh no my aio is leaking. But then I thought no that doesn't make any sense, the liquid would come from the tube, or where the tube connects to the radiator or the pump, right? Thats how I understand it anyway. Above the fan is just the just the rad... right? I checked the tube and connection points they look fine.
There's no shortage of gasses in this house that could liquefy. My computer is in the same room as the kitchen (its a big room and they are on opposite sides, but still) and both me and my room mate vape. I try to blow away from the computer but... I realize that does precious little as its definitely in the air. And its pretty cold this time of year. So I was thinking its some kind of gas that turned to liquid. Anyway I cleaned off both fans and the rad and nothing happened for a couple months ( the rad was bone dry btw). But recently I've had an additional droplet appear. I was able to wipe this one down before it fell. I should have thought to take a picture.... Too bad.
Does the steam from cooking or the vapour/aerosol from the vaping turning to liquid make sense? The only thing that bothers me about that is the drops have come from the same fan, and its the fan thats right next to where the tube connects. (Still don't really understand how liquid from the loop could get into the fan, especially that location of the fan, but that fact still makes me a little nervous.) Could just be that that fan sucks in more air since its also closer to the intake fans and thats the reason.
But then I ask myself why does it happen this winter and not last winter... perhaps its just due to differences in temperature?
I did clean the other fans and while the dust was not completely dry, they were far from developing a liquid like this. But they are also oriented differently, not blowing into a rad and different model fans.
Or.... could it maybe be like some machine oil used in the fan itself? I mean they do go up to 3300rpm and the second drop did seem to accumulate around the edge, near the whatchamacall it ring that connects to the blades. Perhaps between that thing (sorry can't think of the name) and the housing of the fan there is some type of lube to make things quiet in an event of some friction happening...? But then you'd think that would happen in the summer, not the winter. Or maybe its just a time thing. Fans have been running long enough that the lube is starting to succumb to gravity? Idk. I just hope its not some sort of leak. Don't know how it would be possible but still...
Oh and the color of the liquid is light brown, idk if any info can be gleaned from that. So... what do you guys think could be the cause?
Even now you should be able to see some moisture, this is where the last droplet appeared too. Its just a tiny bit now but it will become more in time, at least, thats what I believe will happen if the pattern continues.
TLDR: AIO fan is slowly accumulating droplets and I want to know why. I'm wondering if vapour in the air such as steam/oil from the kitchen or PG/VG from me and my room mate's vapes are possibly liquefying in the cold temperatures. Or if possibly some machine oil is to blame? Or could this somehow be the cooling solution meaning there's a leak? There's reasons I have to doubt all 3 of these... yet they are there so something is happening. I suppose the liquefaction would be the most likely in my estimation. But idk, I'm just some idiot

If it is machine oil, the p12 max is in stock ( not common on canadian amazon) and slightly below normal price. Now would be a good time to buy a replacement.
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