I don't have any info on the noise other hand the fan on my hr-02 macho will turn off from time to time because it cools so well. My video cards are definitely the loudest in my system.
For you, someone who likes quiet systems, air or water both still need a fan and will make noise and the fan you pick has the biggest impact on noise. Thermalright makes very good high quality products and does not skimp when selecting the fan. I you can check on Newegg for the fan they use on the cooler and find out its ratings but like I said my system turns the fan off from time to time with cool and quiet enabled on my machine.
You will want to check hardocp's review on the h100 water cooling kit from corsair but I don't have any first hand experience with them.
-andy
On Nov 11, 2012 12:13 AM, "James" <wire...@tampabay.rr.com> wrote:
>
> Dale <rdalek1967 <at> gmail.com> writes:
>
>
> > I guess it is good for the folks that use water cooling tho. I run
> > plenty cool and quiet with air so I'm not planning to switch. I still
> > like my CPUs to be bare when possible then purchase my cooler separately.
>
> For me, it's basic thermodynamics. Water as a (liquid at working temperatures)
> fluid, moves orders of magnitude more heat than air (as working fluid) does,
> Sure Glycol or TEG (Tetraethylene Glycol) is best, but I do not have time
> to find a non corrosive, non conducting fluid in lieu of water (although Silicone
> brake fluid or DOT-5 might just do the trick). Sorry for the digression.....
>
Oh, we like digressions :-)
I recall that sometimes last year, Tom's Hardware tested running a system without heat sink... but completely immersed in... cooking oil! They made a large acrylic container, poured in gallons of high-quality cooking oil, then proceeded to overclock the CPU and GPU to unholy frequencies...
And, IIRC, Seymour Cray likes to use some inert fluoride-based coolant to dunk the components of his supercomputer machines. And he would even go to lengths to design a "coolant fountain" that's not only functional, but also decorative.
> The only caveat, is to get a cooling system, that is made of robust, quality
> components. Also, monitoring the temperature is important, and it'd be
> nice to have a micro pressure transmitter, downstream of the pumping mechanism
> to ensure no leaks by detecting tiny leaks BEFORE they happen (delta-P).
>
That's the only qualms I have Re: water-coolant. I always an afraid of leaks. So, I always wimped out and use the thermal wick kind of almost, but not quite, somewhat similar to liquid coolant ;-)
Rgds,
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