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Hi all, It's been a while since I've done a heavily modified computer for myself, so with this years tax return I decided to go back to liquid cooling. I'll be modifying my existing Corsair Air 540, and liquid cooling the CPU and GPU using rigid tubing. 

 

Current specs of the computer are: 

 

i7 3770K with no OC (this will change after liquid cooling)

 

EVGA 780Ti Classified

 

16gb of DDR3 1600 Corsair memroy

 

Corsair 850W PSU that's been used for a previous build. 

 

Asrock Z77 Motherboard. 

 

2x Samsung 840 Evo 250gb SSD's in Raid 0

 

All in all this has been a rig that's proved itself to be pretty capable. My only complaint is the excessive fan noise I get when gaming. Hopefully the liquid cooling loop will be able to take care of that. 

 

Parts that will be going into the build. 

 

8x Primochill Revolver black fittings. 

 

1x Alphacool Pump

 

1x Bitspower 150mm Res

 

1x EK Supreme Nickel + Plexi CPU block

 

1x EK 780 Classy Nickel + Plexi GPU block

 

1x 280mm Alphacool 45mm radiator. 

 

1x EK 780 Classy GPU Backplate

 

Customization that will be going into this build:

 

Solid Floor plate to hide the HDD slide in bays that are not in use. 

 

Colored Mesh on the front panel

 

RGBLED lighting for the interior of the case

 

White sleeved cable extensions with Cable combs. 

 

The Log

 

First up, Pulled the mesh out of the front panels to give it a coat of white paint. 

 

UlGhak0.jpg

 

The donor with the old old cardboard floor in place. 

 

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And through the magic of the internet!

 

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And put back on the case!

 

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Looks pretty awesome so far!!

 

Next up, The results of my microcenter run for parts. FrozenCPU shutting down stopped me from placing a single big order. 

 

Alphacool pump with Rigid tube installed, as well as the male-male swivel fitting that will attach the res. 

 

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And the other 7 revolver primochill fittings. I'm in love with the look of these. 

 

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Next I made a false floor that the pump will be mounted to. I didn't take photos of the process, but I scored a piece of plexi to the correct size, then covered it with some silver carbon fiber vinyl. 

 

Test fitting with the pump to see the effect. 

 

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And with the floor installed

 

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View with the side panel on

 

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Perfect Height

 

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That's all for now, I'm waiting on parts to keep going. If you have questions or comments let 'em fly!

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awesome! can't wait to see the finished product!

 eGPU Setup: Macbook Pro 13" 16GB DDR3 RAM, 512GB SSD, i5 3210M, GTX 980 eGPU

New PC: i7-4790k, Corsair H100iGTX, ASrock Fatal1ty Z97 Killer, 24GB Ram, 850 EVO 256GB SSD, 1TB HDD, GTX 1080 Fractal Design R4, EVGA Supernova G2 650W

 

 

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Back for Part 2!

 

There was a box on my door step.... 

 

1hH4flD.jpg

 

Horray! watercooling parts and a foot! Just what I wanted!!

 

dHZfP5W.jpg

 

So first things first. Sanity check on reservoir clearance. 

 

opvXBum.jpg

 

AAAAAND it's Goooood. Millimeters to spare on that card clearance. 

 

A better view of the test fit. 

 

TcApaut.jpg

 

Now for the water blocks. We have one Naked GTX 780Ti

 

LYamaD4.jpg

 

I love this block. So pretty. 

 

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Can't forget about the CPU though. 

 

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First I attached the radiator. 2x140 should be more than enough to cool this rig. I spent a pretty good amount of time routing the cables for this case, everything is fastened on the back so the cables should stay put, and there's combs on the 8pin connectors to help them keep their shape. 

 

bTLw8KS.jpg

 

Next up a good shot with the video card installed, as well as the rear fan. One final test fit of the pump and res with the new floor permanently installed. There was next to no fan clearance, so the original idea to use a 140mm rear fan was out the window. 

 

5geZL3H.jpg

 

I used PETG rigid tubing from primochill, after a 2 scorched bends ( lets call them practice) and about 2 hours during which my camera help was busy holding the heat gun and handing me things we got to the leak testing stage. I'm using microfiber cloths as my drip rags. 

 

4pD4Wu5.jpg

 

And bleeding the loop / Leak testing. I decided to plug in the LED's too so I could see any leaks that might occur. There were none. The system was being powered by an old HTPC power supply that I have dubbed Steven. Mostly because I name every inanimate object Steven...

 

9oYtINm.jpg

 

All in all after the parts came it took me a little over 7 hours to build, cable manage, leak test, and make some slight modifications to the case (I might have accidentally allegedly forgot to give myself a way to access the speed control on the pump... But you know... power tools. )

 

So for everyone's viewing pleasure... The pretty shots of the finished product. 

 

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Fits... barely. 

 

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LED's lit up

 

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It's not blindingly bright, just a nice subtle glow when it's on my desk. 

 

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Well.... with the exception of the EVGA LED's.... Those suckers can sear your retina...

 

9F3aHe5.jpg

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I was about to correct you saying air is already a liquid but i realized i was being an idiot and confusing liquid and fluid

Specs: 4790k | Asus Z-97 Pro Wifi | MX100 512GB SSD | NZXT H440 Plastidipped Black | Dark Rock 3 CPU Cooler | MSI 290x Lightning | EVGA 850 G2 | 3x Noctua Industrial NF-F12's

Bought a powermac G5, expect a mod log sometime in 2015

Corsair is overrated, and Anime is ruined by the people who watch it

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