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Water Cooling

I just custom ordered a system and while on new egg I took a glance at the water cooling systems on there. My question is, how exactly do they work? As an electronics student (for future computer design as hobby) I'd like to know. To me, from the pictures it looked like it was just a tower that held water.

Kiba Ookami
Junior Poster in Training
66 posts since Jan 2005
Reputation Points: 10
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I just custom ordered a system and while on new egg I took a glance at the water cooling systems on there. My question is, how exactly do they work? As an electronics student (for future computer design as hobby) I'd like to know. To me, from the pictures it looked like it was just a tower that held water.


the tank holds cooling liquid and there is a pump attached to this. the pump pushes water through rubber tubings to specially mounted "heatsinks" on the cpu and gpu and such...it goes in one end of the "heatsink" and out the other taking the heat away with it. the water travels from cpu to gpu and to hard drives and then back to the cooling tank again where it just keeps getting cycled...im pretty sure that it is not water used, but a liquid with an increased thermal dynamic properties that absorbs heat quicker. hope this helps :)

nizzy1115
Practically a Posting Shark
864 posts since Jan 2005
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What he said.

I'd recommend not using watercooling systems:
>"Hey, what's that sound?"
>"It's coming from your computer."
>"Oh, !@#$!!! The watercooling hose sprung a leak!"
>*sizzle* *zap* *pop* *sizzle*
>"I think you need a new motherboard..."

mmiikkee12
Posting Whiz in Training
274 posts since Oct 2004
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im pretty sure that it is not water used, but a liquid with an increased thermal dynamic properties that absorbs heat quicker.

It actually is water. You want to put a special solution in the water, though, to keep various "grungies" like bacteria, algae, and mold from forming in the lines. I think there are solutions that help increase thermal dissipation, but I'm pretty sure that you still mix them with water to some degree.

alc6379
Cookie... That's it
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2,820 posts since Dec 2003
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This article has been dead for over three months

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