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The Ultimate Water Cooling Guide
Written by Peter Barnard (16/Jun/2004)
Page 1 of 10

This guide explains everything involved in making your own water cooling system. Kits are great for getting started in water cooling, but if you want the very best performance, you have to buy individual parts and build your own system. In the first part of the guide, we explain how to choose the right components for your needs. We then go on to explain how to design your system for optimal efficiency, and show you how to assemble and fill it.

Introduction: Is water cooling for you?

Choosing The Correct Parts: Pump and Waterblock.

Choosing The Correct Parts: Radiator and Hosing.
Choosing The Correct Parts: Clamps, Water, and Connectors.
Designing the System Correctly: Order of flow, Radiator installation.
Designing the System Correctly: The fill tube.
Assembling the System: Installing Radiator, Pump and Waterblock.
Assembling the System: Installing the Hoses
Assembling the System: Filling and Bleeding.
Final words: Maintenance and Trouble shooting.

Water cooling is becoming increasingly popular for cooling high performance systems. But what makes water cooling so much better than air cooling?

The real advantage to water cooling is its ability to handle much greater CPU wattages than any air cooler can, and not be affected by high case temperatures. A water cooler will not produce significantly lower CPU temperatures than a good air cooler can, if used with a low wattage CPU. When you are using a high end or heavily overclocked CPU that puts out a lot of heat, even a small DIY water cooling system will keep the CPU temperature reasonably low.

Water cooling is the ideal solution for overclocking power hungry CPUs such as the Pentium 4 Prescott and Athlon FX series of chips. Water cooling will not give huge performance increases over high end aircooling when used with older CPUS, but can allow you to achieve low temperatures with much less noise than an air cooling solution.


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