cdawall
where the hell are my stars
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2006
- Messages
- 27,683 (4.10/day)
- Location
- Houston
System Name | Moving into the mobile space |
---|---|
Processor | 7940HS |
Motherboard | HP trash |
Cooling | HP trash |
Memory | 2x8GB |
Video Card(s) | 4070 mobile |
Storage | 512GB+2TB NVME |
Display(s) | some 165hz thing that isn't as nice as it sounded |
I highly doubt this, water cooling can stay good near ambient, but cant got below it. Nor can aircooling, and nor a combination of them.
Anyway, looks nice. But that heat sink is really only practical in a horizantal installation. Maybe your motherboard wouldnt break right away, but with the varieing temperatures from CPU load/idleness, not even to think about the added ambient temperature fluctations... Sooner than later it will at least get some damage there.
Anyway... sounds like a nice solution for a HTPC and passive cooling (or at least very low airflow then)
Actually, yes this type of watercooling will go below ambient. I really don't feel like explaining it so here's a link that explains the concept: http://forum.overclock3d.net/showthread.php?t=3856
The wikipedia explaination: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bong_cooler
There are many other sites out there too that will show you just about any way possible to make one of these bong type coolers. When setup properly, there is no radiator out there that would beat one of these (since no traditional radiator will ever cool below ambient). The only problem is that it is an open system so biocide is necessary but with the evaporation taking place that biocide will also make it into the surrounding air, that also means you always need to keep a close eye on your water levels.
i wanted to post the answer to this no fun
http://reference.techpowerup.com/Bong_cooling