Originally posted by: brblx
there are diminishing gains associated with the more extreme cooling setups. why not start with something a little less involved that watercooling?
with a little reading and the right chip you can get very respectable, relatively safe overclocks with air. two 4890's with quality coolers can also be pushed pretty far, and you'd probably be more than satisfied with a factory oc card (not sure if you were wanting to liquid cool the gpus as well).
Originally posted by: starams5
Agreed with the above, your heart has to be with water cooling and if that was the case you would be willing to install it yourself. No disrespect but you're not ready.
1. The word "potentially" cannot be stressed enough when considering water over air cooling.Originally posted by: mmntech
* Watercooling can potentially boost cooling power and is potentially quieter than strait air.
* You can't really get away with using cheap kits because 9 times out of 10, they fail.
* Most cooling problems associated with air are usually the result of poor airflow inside the case.
* Cleaning up wires and rearranging fans can fix that.
* Using third party GPU coolers helps a lot.
Originally posted by: Blain
1. The word "potentially" cannot be stressed enough when considering water over air cooling.Originally posted by: mmntech
* Watercooling can potentially boost cooling power and is potentially quieter than strait air.
* You can't really get away with using cheap kits because 9 times out of 10, they fail.
* Most cooling problems associated with air are usually the result of poor airflow inside the case.
* Cleaning up wires and rearranging fans can fix that.
* Using third party GPU coolers helps a lot.
You can spend lots of money and still end up with inferior cooling than with a well thought out air cooling system.
2. As to the cheap kit statistic of "9 times out of 10, they fail"...
I've got a feeling that number was pulled out of thin air. A 90% failure rate would be publicised in every kit cooling review written.
3. True that poor air flow inside the case deteriorates the effectiveness of any air cooling system.
4. Poor air flow cannot be fixed by merely moving some wires out of the air path.
It's got more to do with component placement, fan specification/performance, cleanliness and case flow design.
5. After market GPU coolers can help keep graphic cards cool, as long as the rest of the case air flow issues are resolved.
Originally posted by: supertle55
If you want to pay someone to install it, you might as well skip paying someone and overclocking it. Buy the faster more expensive computer/parts. Overclocking is a hobby and to save some money.
Forget that H50 and get to the PanzerBox 😛Originally posted by: MarcVenice
Right now I'll be testing the H50 from Corsair.