Water cooling evga 680i

RobbieMc

Junior Member
Dec 20, 2004
3
0
0
I am thinking about water cooling my computer (QX6700, 8800gtx, evga 680i), and was looking at the koolance exos. I definitely want to water cool the cpu and gpu, but am not sure about the northbridge. Is the stock cooling sufficient? And if I do water cool the northbridge, what would you recommend for cooling the southbridge?
 

thilanliyan

Lifer
Jun 21, 2005
12,041
2,256
126
Since you have obviously spent a lot of money on your comp, why not buy some very good watercooling components. Correct me if I'm wrong but that Koolance kit is not as good as say some of the Swiftech kits.

As for the NB, I doubt it needs watercooling and it's just more restriction into your loop.
 

Smartazz

Diamond Member
Dec 29, 2005
6,128
0
76
Originally posted by: thilan29
Since you have obviously spent a lot of money on your comp, why not buy some very good watercooling components. Correct me if I'm wrong but that Koolance kit is not as good as say some of the Swiftech kits.

As for the NB, I doubt it needs watercooling and it's just more restriction into your loop.

I think that the koolance kits are still great kits, a little pricey though. They're all in one kits too aren't they? That would make installation a lot easier.
 

TheRyuu

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2005
5,479
14
81
No.
Stock cooler is normally enough on some of them.

And I never liked NB coolers or pre-built watercooling things for that matter (like koolance, probably way overpriced)
 

aigomorla

CPU, Cases&Cooling Mod PC Gaming Mod Elite Member
Super Moderator
Sep 28, 2005
21,058
3,550
126
you can go cheaper and better if you custom.

And i dont like koolance. I honestly think there horrible for there value.

If your really insistant on going external, Asetek makes a better external then koolance.

And as wiz stated, i dont like premade kits like that. I like the freedom to swap any part out at my lesiure and not be limited to a few variants.