According to the pic shown above... i think the top cards the GTX version and the bottom is the GTS... cos' i heard the GTS will only use one power connector rather than two which the GTX version has.
The running of a cooling loop from a small eheim pump from ground level to a first floor level has been done and documented over a wizd forums a couple of years ago iirc.
The problem I have with the people who must insist that large bore is better than small bore through the understanding of...
--> edit: This is for all the temperature probe people.. few replies where submitted whilst I was writing this.
but does it really matter???
CPUs are designed with a threshold, and that threshold temperature range is conservative (it always is in any product, not just computer CPUs)...
btw... that's not an Alphacool product, it's a Cape Corp one. Although their tube type reservoirs are sweet though (and Alphacool are crap by comparison!)
1/4" refers to the ID, which is roughly 6.35mm and essentially the same as 8/6mm.
With Plug & Cool Push fittings as seen on Aquacomputer, the tubing used is PUR 8/6 tubing (meaning 6mm ID and 1mm side walls = 8mm OD), and on Koolance systems, the tubing is usually PVC, which is softer than...
they still haven't got any blocks out yet?
been in the design stages for ages, iirc they did have a run of a few blocks a while back, but not in any large amounts.
Looks interesting, but until they actually release any... i'm not that interested.
Ah, not quite actually... I run 4 sticks of RAM on a DFI SLI-DR and it works perfectly... the Ramplex will quite happily cool all 4 sticks, although I admit that a fan directed at the RAM would do just as good a job and the innovatek ram coolers maybe even better.
But the point is that I...
Oops... you are going to find that it's be quite difficult (i reckon almost impossible) to get those to fit.
Aquacomputer SLI chipset block is made with 8/6mm push fit connectors in mind... even 10/8mm push fit connectors won't fit.
Looking at mine, I reckon you can fit the barbs on, but...