View Poll Results: Has this happen to you?
- Voters
- 10. You may not vote on this poll
-
July 22nd, 2002, 04:10 AM
#1
PC Cooling Options
I am currently planning the construction of a new PC from scratch (dual Itanium2s) and am in the market for an alternative cooling source. I have done quite a bit of research, online, in magazines, in scientific journals and through various engineers I am in contact with. I have come down to two possible cooling units: either a water cooled or with a Peltier element. For those who are unfamiliar with these two types of cooling, I have included two links below which may be of interest to you. Anyway, I have more information than I could possibly ever want regarding these cooling systems, but I want first-hand experience. Have any of you ever used either a water cooled system or the peltier element? If so, what do you think of it? Would you recommend it to anyone else?
Peltier Element Information
http://www.heatsink-guide.com/peltier.htm
Danger Den Water Cooling
http://www.dangerden.com/
AJ
-
July 22nd, 2002, 04:29 AM
#2
Well, I'm planning a single-processor machine running an AMD, and I was planning to go with Air. I suppose you could do watercooling, but you'd need a large case, and it may run up to $200 for cooling components. Tom's Hardware had some good primers on it a while back. I dunno about peltiers, but if you plan to pack a ton of things into a case and cooling is important, and you have the dough, go with water. Otherwise (I don't know how hot dual Itaniums run) maybe go with a heavy-duty aircooling solution.
[HvC]Terr: L33T Technical Proficiency
-
July 22nd, 2002, 05:27 PM
#3
your peltier link didn't work...but here's one i found yesterday...
http://www.arstechnica.com/guide/cooling/peltier-1.html
until yesterday i hadn't heard about peltiers....but i was looking at a color ccd for my telescope and it comes with a peltier cooler...which cools to -15c ...chilly (although i do most sky watching in winter...so technically...in our area this would be a ccd "warmer"...hehe...
I used to be With IT. But then they changed what IT was. Now what I'm with isn't IT, and what's IT seems scary and weird." - Abe Simpson
-
July 22nd, 2002, 05:36 PM
#4
Senior Member
I want to go water cooling. If you are planning on overclocking pretty extremely, I'd go with a water cooled peltier. This does require an extra PSU, or power source because as you have read they require a lot of power. If you just want your PC optimal w/o OC'ing, get a couple nice heatsinks/fans and you'll do fine.
Search First Ask Second. www.google.com
-
July 22nd, 2002, 06:25 PM
#5
Member
Normally, I'd recommend a KryoTech case, but apparently they're in-between projects right now. Which is too bad -- it's the best solution IMHO, but also pricey. But from what I've seen, water cooling is better, but I don't know if I'd trust either. One is a powerhog and overheats itself. The other put water in your computer -- it just makes me a bit leary.
Just remember: Abraham Lincoln didn\'t die in vain. He died in Washington D.C.
-
July 22nd, 2002, 10:13 PM
#6
the problem with peltier coolant systems is you can hardly ever shut off your machine, if you do you run a major risk. its much like a refrigerator in that it gets as cold as your processors heat up. when you turn off the computer, condensation will arise underneath the cooling pad, so you run the risk of shocking your machine and causing a meltdown. While not always the case, it does happen.
The same could be said of water cooling systems.
Personally, I would use lots of air. the right fans matched with the right heatsinks would do fine.
Antionline in a nutshell
\"You\'re putting the fate of the world in the hands of a bunch of idiots I wouldn\'t trust with a potato gun\"
Trust your Technolust
-
July 23rd, 2002, 01:07 AM
#7
what about an ice-box...
www.vapochill.com
1,7GHz Intel Pentium 4 thermic accelerated to 2363MHz!
(no hardware tweaks, just the fridge)
max
<edit> damn, didn't realise this was a poll, but i would have voted for the fridge anyway.
Hmm...theres something a little peculiar here. Oh i see what it is! the sentence is talking about itself! do you see that? what do you mean? sentences can\'t talk! No, but they REFER to things, and this one refers directly-unambigeously-unmistakably-to the very sentence which it is!
-
July 23rd, 2002, 01:19 AM
#8
Junior Member
heheh...FREON! HARD CORE COOLING!
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|