Originally posted by: GAZZA
Watercooling consists of component wise :
Water Block
Radiator + Fan/s
Pump
Tubing
WaterBlock mounts on your cpu like a normal heatsink would, then you have a pump which moves the heated water from the WaterBlock to the Radiator where you'll usually have 1 fan or more blowing/extracting the heat away from the Radiator.
That's the basics of it and there's a lot more to it than just hooking up those components.
Originally posted by: TheCorm
I was reminded of that post on another forum where I guy said he filled his case completely with water and it cause the power to go out with a bang after he tried to turn it on.
Reasonably certain it was a joke but it might not have been....
Originally posted by: stonecold3169
I have a question on water cooling I have never asked,, but have been curious about.
I've been thinking about going WC, and replacing my slk-800, but if I do it, I would replace all the major hotspots on my rig. My question is this:
I understand the idea of watercooling just fine, it makes perfect sense to me. But if I want to cool my 9700pro, and then my north&south bridges, ordering would obviously be important... you can't make it back to the radiator before each component, right? So basically, the water is heating up along the way, right? Wouldn't this give pretty poor cooling?
Originally posted by: huesmann
If you need to load up your radiator with fans, doesn't that kinda go against the purpose of watercooling, i.e. lower noise?
Originally posted by: KillaBong
It's still much quieter. The main reason is overclocking though, right? I would think of noise reduction as a nice added plus for me though.
Originally posted by: syberscott
The idea is to cool the water back down to room temp by moving it through an air cooled radiator.