Elliott C. Back: Internet & Technology

Water Cooling Tutorial & Install Guide How-To

Posted in Computers & Technology, Hardware by Elliott Back on November 20th, 2006.

Introduction

If you’ve ever wanted a quiet, affordable cooling solution for your PC, watercooling is for you. Even a case designed for quiet fans can be too noisy and run too hot on today’s power-hungry hardware. Personally, I was finding with three case fans, a CPU cooler, two power supply fans, and the build in fan on my graphics card, that the system got too hot. And, it was noisy as hell!

My desktop is made up of the following components:

  • Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Conroe 2.4GHz 4M sharing L2 Cache LGA 775
  • 4 GB PC2 5300 RAM
  • Intel Desktop Motherboard D975XBX
  • Seagate Barracuda ST3320620AS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s
  • ASUS EAX1900 CrossFire 512M PCI Express x16
  • Antec LifeStyle SONATA II Case

Before installing the water cooling solution, my graphics card idled at 60° C:

temp-before.jpg

Afterwards, it hovers around 40° C a little warmer than room temp:

temp-after.jpg

The Solution

For only $89.99 you can buy the KINGWIN Aquastar AS-3000 cooling system. I also added a little Arctic Silver 5 thermal compound to my order, although the Kingwin system comes with its own thermal paste you can use. You’ll also need distilled water.

What you get from this is a device which sits in two 5 1/2″ bays and pumps water to a CPU block and a GPU block. It comes with adapters to fit virtually all (read the product description for a list) processors and video cards, hoses, screws, antifreeze, and more. Everything you might need is included.

Unboxing

Let’s take a look at what Kingwin gives you for $90:

unboxing-01.jpg

unboxing-02.jpg

Installation

Here is what my system looks like before any work is done:

install-01.jpg

The Antec Sonata 2 case has a weird air-duct which needs to be removed:

install-02.jpg

Outside of the case, you’ll need to assemble the GPU and CPU pads and connect them with the hosing to the pump unit for an out-of-case test. You don’t want leaks inside your case, so we run it outside first. Connect the hoses, unscrew the cap, add the antifreeze, top up with distilled water, plug into the case power, and run for a while. Technically distilled water doesn’t conduct electricity, but I don’t want to find out.

install-03.jpg

install-04.jpg

Our first problem is that the screw mounts don’t fit our drive bays–we need to remove the top mounts, which is no biggie:

install-05.jpg

Success! Time to connect the heat-blocks:

install-06.jpg

Installing the GPU block

The ATI 1950 is funny, because it includes its own huge fan and cooling block. You need to completely remove it, and attach your the heating block, using the Geforce 6800 clip they provide. Don’t forget the thermal grease!

install-07.jpg

install-08.jpg

Installing the CPU block

Interestingly, the thermal paste on the CPU was pretty bad, so I improved it. This step is is hard as taking off the previous CPU block and adding the watercooled one:

install-09.jpg

The Final Product

Note that the water cooling system doesn’t work sideways, so you have to test it right-side up. But that aside, here’s what it looks like installed and running!

final-01.jpg

final-02.jpg

What I Look Like These Days

Posted in Life, Photo by Elliott Back on November 19th, 2006.

Elliott Back
Elliott Bäck’s current look, with facial hair and up close

Scary Eyed Elliott
Somehow, my eyes turn out very strange in this photo–I blame Adobe

WP Autoblog, Spam, & Trackbacks

Posted in Spam, Wordpress by Elliott Back on November 19th, 2006.

I recently had a post of mine syndicated in short format through WP-Autoblog by Robot World Online:

robots.jpg

This is a perfect use of my plugin–to aggregate in a non-copyright-violating format a lot of different resources on a topic–in this case, robots. The guy even enhanced my short summary by bolding the keywords around which he’s aggregating. Now, some of you might disagree, but I feel that this is not spam.

The second issue involves trackbacks, about which Matt Mullenweg, creator of Wordpress, has been quite adamant:

As this software runs by default, it strikes me as irresponsible. Judging from the data I’m seeing from Akismet, it’s causing tens of thousands of pingbacks that people are considering annoying enough to mark as spam, and about two-thirds of those are from blogs which are clearly splogs using your software.

There are two cases where pingbacks are sent out:

  1. The blog using my plugin is clearly spam
  2. The blog using my plugin is not spam

In both cases, pingbacks are useful. In the first, you want to know if your intellectual property is being abused. The ping is an alert system that someone has copied your content. In the second case, the pingback is harmless, because someone has aggregated a snippet of property in a more useful glob.

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