Air is better than water

  • @[email protected]
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    331 year ago

    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.

    • Björn Tantau
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      151 year ago

      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.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        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

      • @GaMEChld
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        81 year ago

        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.

    • @ours
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      141 year ago

      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.