Tom's Guide Forums
  Tom's Guide Forums » Overclocking » Cooler and Heatsinks » Is liquid cooling really worth the money?
 

Add a reply



 Word :   Username :  
 
 Page :   1  2  3  4
Previous 
Author
 Thread : Is liquid cooling really worth the money?
 
More Information

Is liquid really worth it ? Can CPU fans with Heatsinks still keep a proc. very cool and still have good overclocking standards? If so what are some good CPU fans with Heatsinks, any price is ok...
Thx

Related Pr oduct
Register or log in to remove.

More Information

When you say liquid cooling youre generalizing too much.
Is a disney all-in-one kit worth it? NO
Is a $300 custom loop worth it? If youve got the money, certainly yes.
Is a $140 CPU only loop worth it? Definetly
It all depends on how you do it to make it better than every HSF on the market at a reasonable price.

More Information

Liquid Cooling can be very effective and cost efficent, if you do your research. This is an important point, because not only can you throughly fry your CPU if you don't know what your doing, you could actually kill your whole system. Research, download documents, and ask questions. Have a clear idea in mind of which parts, how they connect together, and know exactly how they work.

It's not really that hard, but you do need to know how it works, and how to fine tune it to get the best performance.

Good Luck![/u][/i]

More Information

For the price of a water block you can get a high-end heat pipe cooler... and since you willl use the same 120mm fan on either setup the noise will be the same.

and then there is a $100 worth of pump, radiator, reservoir, pipes, and time...

for the most part overclockability is determined by vcore.
At normal voltages, say <1.4v on a c2d, there isn't a lot to be gained by lowering core temp a bit. and even stock cooler can move that much heat (maybe not quietly)

IF you are going to try a TEC, its a must, or really high vcore...

I went from water to air, just because 3200Mhz was a nice round number, and I can do with a much simpler system, that and x1900 runs as cool with the hr-03 as it did being second in my single loop.

More Information

The money you spend on water can probably get you a faster CPU, and you wont have to worry about buying after market HSFs.

water cooling can be a pain to setup... I would only do it if you plan to OC a lot.

More Information

Yes but you wont nearly reach the OCs youve reach with a E6400 watercooled to a E6600 on stock cooling. Not to mention that water cooling will last you for years to come if you properly maintain it.

More Information

Quote :

Is liquid really worth it ? Can CPU fans with Heatsinks still keep a proc. very cool and still have good overclocking standards? If so what are some good CPU fans with Heatsinks, any price is ok...
Thx



No. It is not worth it.

More Information

Woah you sure know how to make a point...

More Information

yes it is worth the effort if you do it right
dario is not far off .
a custom liquid cooling kit will get nice results and last years maintained.
if you are limited with cash a good swiftech kit will get the results your after and you can mod it later.
my max oc on air was 3400 on the swiftech modded kit the max is in my sig
I run 3.6 GHz 24/7 3.9 for heavy demands all stable.

More Information

Quote :

if you are limited with cash a good swiftech kit will get the results your after and you can mod it later.

Even Swiftech kits are considering expensive if youre looking for budget.
You can have a loop that will be ~5c over Swiftech for $130, thats what people are paying for those miserable air cooled TECs!

More Information

I believe the starter kit is around 160.00
and the thermaltake is not worth the effort but better than air

More Information
More Information

Quote :

I believe the starter kit is around 160.00
and the thermaltake is not worth the effort but better than air

$130 is the minimun budget you can get away in a do it yourself loop while keeping top performance, not any complete kit.
I have yet to know a decent ThermalCRAP product with water running trhu it, if it was up to me all of them would be banned from the market for life.

More Information

Perhaps you should provide him links
after all he's asking for your advise. :wink:
and thermalcrap is not for the weak of heart .
I do admit they work but not something you can leave unattended.

More Information

Yes, watercooling is worth the money.
Just look at some water cooling reviews, and look at the temp. charts that compare to Air cooling.
You would see that watercooling keeps a very stable temp (some times you can achieve only 10degF in load over idle.

Plus, it lasts a while in 2 ways.
One, keeps your chip alive longer
Two, you can use the parts in upgraded systems for a long time to come.

More Information

First of all, every thermalcrap product underperforms for its price. You simply cant argue with that statement.

Hm, lets see, the way I would do a budget loop would be:
Via Aqua 2300 $27
Apogee or MP-01 $50
Swiftech MCR120 $24
Delrin fillport $8
tubing $3
Tline and clamps $8
Yate Loon fan $5
Total: $125
You can still go even cheaper by getting a heatercore from a junkyard and a second hand block, but well just settle for retail.
I can ensure that such setup wont be more than 4c over your current water cooling setup.

More Information

Quote :

you can use the parts in upgraded systems for a long time to come.

And this is one of the companinies main concerns, thats why CoolTechnica and Swiftech are selling AM2 bracket for their blocks 8)

More Information

Quote :

First of all, every thermalcrap product underperforms for its price. You simply cant argue with that statement.



I could argue.
but hardly worth the effort.(you'll just flame me) 8)
you see I own a thermalcrap.
bigwater se.
99 bucks and it works just fine for the money.
the problem with the acrylic waterblock cracking is by poor retention design.
people overtighten them because there is no spring tention or tension limiting devise .
the poor pump design was revised and for an economy unit it works just fine for a cheap unit.
Problem is 1/4 stock tubing..... I replaced it with 3/8 tubing.
and lapped the waterblock getting another 4C cooler on max oc on my 4.2GHz D920 running since april without a problem and never shuts down.
I wouldnt build such a Rig for a customer but if you actually tested one like I did you might even class it higher than dog dung.
Dont get me wrong ... it is absolutly not recomenable for everyday use unless you watch it closely.
But unlike you I test these dumb quirky units for the hell of it.
So when it comes time to evaluate or help I can give an honest opinion from experience.
I just thought I'd ruffle rour feathers :wink:

More Information

Quote :

you actually tested one like I did you might even class it higher than dog dung.

And you dont rate it as such after all the problems you mentioned??
When it comes to spending my money and rating hardware I keep my standards high, very high. Thats why something like TT gets the Thermalcrap title for me.

PS: What do you think of my budget loop?

More Information
n°1408629
12-21-2006 at 08:55:06 PM