this is the single 120mm radiator kit with the CPU/GPU/chipset waterblocks
1) taking off the stock cooling for video cards now-a-days takes off not only the GPU HSF but often the memory's as well. What thrid party memory heatsinks should I get if I cool the GPU via waterblock? Looking into the all copper heatsinks by vantec on newegg, but that's all i've found so far.
2) I have a MSI Neo4 Platinum motherboard. The chipset is relatively close to the end of the video card (I have an x800xl now and the end overlaps the screw holes where the chipset HSF mounts). will this be a problem with the asetek shipset waterblock? It looks small enough, and with the holes pointing straight up, it shouldn't interfere unless the next gen card has extra large capacitors at the end...?
3) Has anyone tried/bought/reviewed the single 120mm version of this kit? I've seen the comparisons between the dual and triple kits, but not the single. any first hand experience would be helpful.
4) I have a lianli pc-60 case with a ModStream 520watt PSU. for the way the power cables are insulated (first with an EMF shield and then a 1/8 plastic tube), it makes bending nearly impossible for the larger cables (motherboard power cable mainly). Plus, the location of the top 80mm blowhole is really close to the PSU and where the power cables come out. Sites that had the 120mm fan+radiator in a pc-60 had the radiator mounted where the blowhole is (by cutting a 12cm hole in the top). But looking into my case now, I wouldn't be able to cut out the grill and screw holes without going too close to my PSU. Ideas? I could try to bend the power cables around the radiator, but it might press against the radiator too much or not even have enough room with a 120mm fan there. Any way to externally mount it? And if so, maybe I'll upgrade to the dual 120 radiator.
also, it looks like I'm going to have to take out the HDD cage to fit the pump and reservoir. can a 160gb and 80gb HDDs sit in the 3 1/2 floppy bays and still stay cool enough? The pics in the link show the guy did so, but I've always been loathe to have a HDD in stagnant air.
1) taking off the stock cooling for video cards now-a-days takes off not only the GPU HSF but often the memory's as well. What thrid party memory heatsinks should I get if I cool the GPU via waterblock? Looking into the all copper heatsinks by vantec on newegg, but that's all i've found so far.
2) I have a MSI Neo4 Platinum motherboard. The chipset is relatively close to the end of the video card (I have an x800xl now and the end overlaps the screw holes where the chipset HSF mounts). will this be a problem with the asetek shipset waterblock? It looks small enough, and with the holes pointing straight up, it shouldn't interfere unless the next gen card has extra large capacitors at the end...?
3) Has anyone tried/bought/reviewed the single 120mm version of this kit? I've seen the comparisons between the dual and triple kits, but not the single. any first hand experience would be helpful.
4) I have a lianli pc-60 case with a ModStream 520watt PSU. for the way the power cables are insulated (first with an EMF shield and then a 1/8 plastic tube), it makes bending nearly impossible for the larger cables (motherboard power cable mainly). Plus, the location of the top 80mm blowhole is really close to the PSU and where the power cables come out. Sites that had the 120mm fan+radiator in a pc-60 had the radiator mounted where the blowhole is (by cutting a 12cm hole in the top). But looking into my case now, I wouldn't be able to cut out the grill and screw holes without going too close to my PSU. Ideas? I could try to bend the power cables around the radiator, but it might press against the radiator too much or not even have enough room with a 120mm fan there. Any way to externally mount it? And if so, maybe I'll upgrade to the dual 120 radiator.
also, it looks like I'm going to have to take out the HDD cage to fit the pump and reservoir. can a 160gb and 80gb HDDs sit in the 3 1/2 floppy bays and still stay cool enough? The pics in the link show the guy did so, but I've always been loathe to have a HDD in stagnant air.