hey thank you. that stuff is not necessarily news for me there but I still appreciate it. I was thinking someone was going to point out if you use some sort of particular automotive coolant the corrosion worries go away completely, but maybe most PC enthusiasts don't use it because it only comes in some Ghostbusters Slimer green color or has some awful off putting odor to it, it stains components in the loop, etc....something that would be a turn off to use it in your PC as opposed to being perfectly acceptable to put in a vehicle. all those fluids water cooling component companies sell claim the same thing, to help mitigate corrosion. but it doesn't flat out prevent it. and that was my point, this is going to get messed up eventually and these things only delay the inevitable. sort of like the very important difference between "water resistant" and "water proof". one meaning, hey if you're out in the rain your watch isn't going to break but if you drop it in the bath tub, it's a goner. while the other might be capable of literally going scuba diving with. these fluids are the equivalent of corrosion resistant, not corrosion proof. my overall feeling remains the same, mixed metals in a loop, at least mixing aluminum and copper that is, should be avoided at all costs because you are creating an ecosystem that will begin to deteriorate as soon as you implement it.