Anti_Face_Weapon,

A big ass CPU heat sync and fan like that is usually at least as good as most water cooling options. Often times it scores higher on performance tests. It depends on your exact hardware of course.

ArianaGrande,

I have a huge fuckin Noctua fan like that, and it’s the most silent shit I’ve ever had in a computer. I don’t even understand how they achieved that.

Anti_Face_Weapon,

Just a high quality fan I guess. If they’re good they can be really really quiet. If they use brushless motors that can be almost completely silent.

pigup,
Honytawk,

That is why you have dust filters

ours,

It’ll take dust over water any day of the week and weekends too.

okiloki,

My GPU had a shitty blower cooler, switching to water-cooling made my system so much more quiet!

Blackmist,

I don’t understand why they sell GPUs for up to $2000, and they still come with the same crappy fans we had on $150 cards.

Want watercooling? Have fun invalidating your warranty.

beefcat, (edited )

I don’t follow. The cooler designs on modern midrange and high end GPUs are way bigger and more elaborate than anything that has ever shipped on a $150 GPU.

RaoulDook,

There are also great coolers that come on stock cards, you just have to pick one that isn’t shitty. No temp issues with my EVGA or Gigabyte cards that have huge heatsinks and 3 big fans on them.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Did you consider this earth shattering idea of replacing shitty stock fans with actually good fans? Or mounting atop good fans?

Aradia,
@Aradia@lemmy.ml avatar

The problem with Noctua is that you need a lot of space…

Honytawk,

Because a water pump, water block on both the CPU and GPU and tons of tubes, don’t take up much space?

frezik,

Big air coolers don’t fit because there isn’t enough height off the CPU inside the case. An O11 Dynamic (regular size) doesn’t fit an NH-D15, for example, but it fits water cooling with at least one regular thickness 360mm rad on top just fine. (And also one on the bottom, and a thin one on the side).

Aradia, (edited )
@Aradia@lemmy.ml avatar

Imagine having a big Noctua on every component…

EDIT: I wanted a Noctua but with my two big GPUs, there is no space for a Noctua… and depends on which motherboard also includes water cooling tubes already built-in.

water cooling with space jpg

water cooling with space 2 jpg

Much more space on CPU (at least you see the RAM and other components), yeah, depends on how you built it. The PC can “breath”. When I said “you need a lot of space” I mean on the CPU, if your RAM and 2 GPU is all near there… all the heat gets concentrated.

ours,

DIY Perks on YouTube did a beautiful machine with a Noctua cooler on a GPU. All with a nautical theme.

Aradia, (edited )
@Aradia@lemmy.ml avatar

As I have more GPUs, inside the case it’s full of components and with a Noctua (if it even fills in) would be hard to “breath”. It’s not that difficult to understand…

liquid_exampleair_example

thmnwlf,

yea but whatercooling is a complete new space in the whole building process, when building alone gets boring it opens a whole new door to customization, dedication and „learning“ (its not a really usefull skill), but if its something that pleases you, its just freakin cool, even tho it sucks compared to air cooling its a huge subspace in the custom pc scene. its an enthusiast thing for people who are a bit freaky :) i love it and im always happy when i look at my machine

RememberTheApollo_, (edited )

Eh, how does it suck compared to air cooling? I mean, yeah it’s expensive and requires more maintenance, but it’s way quieter and keeps the components cooler than air cooling.

E: a lot of people who are saying all the stuff that could go wrong sound like they’ve never built a WC system and refuse to acknowledge that many of these issues are likely operator/installer error. Installation absolutely does require more care and effort than an air cooled system. I’m not trying to suggest anyone WC or that it’s better than air, you do you, I don’t care, but WC is trouble free if done correctly with good components.

frezik,

It has more points of failure, and that failure can be more catastrophic. If your air cooler falls off somehow or the fan dies, CPUs these days are pretty good about shutting themselves off before they melt. If your fittings leak, it can destroy everything.

RememberTheApollo_,

That’s certainly a risk one takes. FWIW I built mine with custom hard lines and fittings, and after the initial shakedown test, have had zero leaks in 6 years. YMMV, I guess.

Sheeple, (edited )
@Sheeple@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • RememberTheApollo_,

    I sincerely doubt this as some sort of random or unknown issue. It uses the exact same attach points as a stock cooler or even a good aftermarket cooler. None of those warp the mobo or gpu. Keeping the temperature extremes down should prevent warping, if anything. I’ve been through two WC motherboards and 3 gpus and have experienced zero warping.

    The only thing I can offer is either the boards that do warp are cheaply made and unable to support the weight of a good waterblock or the installer is over-enthusiastic about securing it and does so too tightly and thereby causes the damage. My current waterblock has specific instructions regarding installation to prevent over-tightening and damage to the motherboard and components. IOW I suggest it’s an installer problem the vast majority of the time.

    thmnwlf, (edited )

    you can destroy your graphics card before even putting it in the system when you fuck up the installation of your block? your system can leak and everything dies because of a short? one cirtical component in your loop dies (like the pump) and all of the work starts over again? it doesnt suck, but if youre not into this whole builiding thing, it sucks compared to aircooling because you have almost no advantage beside temps and noise, even those can be worse if you dont know what youre doing. it doesnt suck as a whole thing, but compared to aircooling its not worth the money, the work or even the flex of you dont enjoy the process of putting it together!

    Zerush,
    @Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

    Where there is a will, there is a way

    https://file.coffee/u/qnAA6dm0EHeEVdLygrKGa.png

    petersr,

    Kind of beautiful

    HurlingDurling,

    Got to love that condensation that will happen in the PC

    Zerush,
    @Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar
    ornery_chemist,

    Just bought one of those brown monsters for a new build, can’t wait to try it

    TopRamenBinLaden,

    The noctua air coolers work so well. As long as you don’t care about the station wagon color scheme I think it’s the best cooler for that price range by a large margin.

    onlooker,
    @onlooker@lemmy.ml avatar

    I think it depends on the use case. Personally, I simply don’t jive with the idea of conductive liquids swirling inside my expensive PC.

    bjoern_tantau,
    @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

    You’re supposed to use distilled water which is not conductive. At least that used to be the case last I saw liquid cooling.

    In the end it’s simply not worth it for me. You still need to radiate the heat out, which usually means a big fan, which most air coolers nowadays have anyways.

    zagaberoo,

    Liquid coolers are by definition just an extra heat exchange step unless you’re venting heat into the ocean or something like a nuclear plant. Otherwise, the atmosphere is your final heat sink either way.

    Unless a liquid cooling radiator is significantly larger than the air cooler that would fit directly on the CPU there’s no point whatsoever.

    _dev_null,
    @_dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz avatar

    there’s no point whatsoever

    I’ve been building my own PCs for a looong time, and I’ve been skeptical of using water cooling in any of my machines.

    This changed recently for me, when I got my first 4000 series nvidia gpu, that fucker is huge! And it runs hot, spewing all of its heat directly into the middle of the case. I had serious concerns with this gpu + massive cpu air cooler getting in the way of positive airflow through my case.

    And this is where water cooling made perfect sense to me: transport the heat away from the cpu, thus clearing a ton of space from the middle of the case, then have a radiator at the top of the case dissipate that cpu heat.

    This allows for a ton of air to go through my case, evacuating all of that heat blowing out of the gpu. This also allows for other heat sinks on the mobo and other components to passively cool better

    Tak,
    @Tak@lemmy.ml avatar

    I agree with you in most cases.

    There is a point though as a water cooler can cool an extremely small area better than heatpipes. Look at Zen 4 processors for instance. The CCD is so small and offset that many air coolers don’t properly line the heat pipes with part of the CPU making the most heat. Because of this Noctua even makes and sells an offset bracket to try and move the heatpipes over the CCD. Meanwhile a waterblock should cool the entire area at effectively the same rate as it doesn’t rely on vaporizing the coolant and condensing but just pushing coolant through regardless of heat saturation.

    Only a fraction of people should really notice that like overclockers and generally people buy coolers they don’t need.

    GaMEChld,

    No coolant is non-conductive after it leaks. It will mix with dust that has built up on the surfaces of the components and become conductive.

    The main reason for distilled water is to prevent corrosion and deposits forming inside the loop.

    ornery_chemist, (edited )

    I think water is rather rare as a coolant these days. Organics (chemical sense not farming sense) like propylene glycol or some kind of glyme aren’t potentially corrosive to metals if spilled, are harder to grow shit in, have lower volatility, and have a higher thermal limit. Maybe also with a little bit of antifouling agent thrown in. My main gripe with them is that if you do spill them, they don’t evaporate and you’re slipping over the floor for the next few days because you missed a spot.

    But yeah, air cooling ftw

    ours,

    It’s simple for me. Points of failures of air cooling: fans. Failure states: fan fails, system heat protection kicks in and shuts down.

    Water cooling? Points of failure: fans, pumps, tubbings, fittings. Failure states: fan fails (best case), worst case? Liquid goes over electronics while they are powered.

    devbo,

    just admitting you dont know how cooling works. thats cool.

    Sheeple, (edited )
    @Sheeple@lemmy.world avatar

    Okay but what is there to know that isn’t there to know via basic physics and chemistry?

    Any cooling works by allowing heat to gather in a source like say a heat sink combined with a way to conduct the heat to somewhere. Either into the surrounding air or liquids.

    Then you need something to move the hot conducting matter away to replace it with cold conducting matter. A fan happens to be convenient for moving the hot air that gathered around and inside the heat sink.

    ilovesatan,
    @ilovesatan@lemmy.world avatar

    Unless you need extra gpu cooling. Which I don’t so I’m a hurricane boy weeeeeeeeeeee

    Goldmaster,

    Yes this correct. I always use air cooling for my self and clients computer builds. With water cooling, you are asking for trouble.

    shiveyarbles,

    Yes thank you. I went through a water cooling phase, what a pain in the ass. Worrying about the pump, algae, topping off reservoir, leaks ruining your motherboard. The concept is nice, but the reality is high fucking maintenance for no added value.

    BonfireOvDreams, (edited )
    @BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.ml avatar

    Quieter, less point’s of failure, and in many cases taking up less space. I have compressed air for dust. In the consumer sphere and almost any enthusiast sphere, air cooling > > > water cooling

    otp,

    less point’s a failure

    Why is a “less point” a failure?

    Shepstr,

    He means ‘less points of failure’.

    BonfireOvDreams,
    @BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.ml avatar

    I CAN’T SPELL it’s less points of failure.

    TonyToniToneOfficial,
    @TonyToniToneOfficial@lemmy.ml avatar

    *fewer

    Ibaudia,
    @Ibaudia@lemmy.world avatar

    Don’t use compressed air on your fans while they’re plugged into the board! It generates current that feeds into your mobo. Usually nothing bad happens but there can be problems associated with it.

    Lt_Cdr_Data,

    That “usually nothing bad happens” will have to do.

    Schmuppes,

    Definitely not quieter. I never regretted building my custom loop.

    Mrkawfee,

    Compressed air is magic. Just cleaned my case and it all looks brand new.

    SpaceCadet,
    @SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

    The only downside really is RAM slot clearance when you need a beefier air cooler.

    beefcat,

    I like not having to worry about a leak destroying all my expensive hardware.

    Karyoplasma,

    I once had a PC with watercooling. It died because I was drinking with a friend and wanted to show it off. So I removed the sidepanel and my drunken self tipped the beer bottle which promptly spilled over the running mainboard. Welp, it was some form of water that killed my PC I guess.

    Obonga,

    Like i give a fuck what cools best. I want my system to look awesome and the AIO sure looks better imo. At the end of the day: build the PC that makes you happy.

    Zerush,
    @Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

    Some suggestions here, the first a good GPU that can run Cyberpunk or the Witcher III at 300 FPS

    https://file.coffee/u/-HvMgNnFK3qqnxvWPUQhP.png

    pugetsystems.com/…/1-7x-nvidia-geforce-rtx-4090-g…

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