Anyone tried out any of these HDD water cooling products?
Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee
-
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Sun Jul 25, 2004 3:27 am
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Anyone tried out any of these HDD water cooling products?
HD-O-Matic MICRO Hard drive watercooler for 3,5 HDD
Innovatek HD-O-Matic Waterblock HDD
I'm thinking of getting one of there watercooling product for cooling the hdd's... but i can't find any review or anything on these So i turn to you people =))
Have you tried out any of these 2 and can say what temp you got or something?
Innovatek HD-O-Matic Waterblock HDD
I'm thinking of getting one of there watercooling product for cooling the hdd's... but i can't find any review or anything on these So i turn to you people =))
Have you tried out any of these 2 and can say what temp you got or something?
I can't speak from first hand experience, but you may want to investigate the SilentStar (SilentStor?) HD-dual and single - these cool and quieten your hard drives, and I've seen a report (on a forum, in French, badly translated by google) that it cooled a Cheetah 15K.3 to 36ºC. So it should cool a Raptor or any 7,200 RPM drive just fine.
My only experience with HD blocks is with the Koolance one. The experience was bad, it killed my drive. Since then I've just payed a little attention to airflow in the case so there is sufficient cooling on the drives. They aren't hard to cool even with very quiet case setups if you make sure they get decent airflow.
-
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 7:10 pm
While those already mentioned will all work you may also wish to check out the ones made by Asetek
www.frozencpu.com
A combination of a copper contact plate & plexi upper, a bit of bling & also the copper should aid temps. Yet as only the contact plate is copper it shouldn't weigh to much.
www.frozencpu.com
A combination of a copper contact plate & plexi upper, a bit of bling & also the copper should aid temps. Yet as only the contact plate is copper it shouldn't weigh to much.
-
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 7:10 pm
HDD Cool
After a lot of research (there's not much out there about this enclousure but none of the others seemed that great so it was the one with the most promise!) I settled on the SilentStar Dual watercooled HDD enclousure. Starbuck3733T is using one in his Goliath - 70+ pounds of watercooled beast project and he seems very happy with it (think he wrote a mini review in his project log on bit-tech.net)
Its said to smother the noise of even a 15k SCSI drive (as mentioned above). I have it sat ready to be installed just waiting on the last few parts for my w/c system to arrive so I'll let you know when its installed
here's a pic ...
Its said to smother the noise of even a 15k SCSI drive (as mentioned above). I have it sat ready to be installed just waiting on the last few parts for my w/c system to arrive so I'll let you know when its installed
here's a pic ...
-
- Posts: 100
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:02 pm
- Location: Salisbury, UK
Yeah, I've just got a dual cooler but haven't had a chane to fit it. They're rated to cool two raptors pretty well. depends on flow rate mainly.Spod wrote:I can't speak from first hand experience, but you may want to investigate the SilentStar (SilentStor?) HD-dual and single - these cool and quieten your hard drives, and I've seen a report (on a forum, in French, badly translated by google) that it cooled a Cheetah 15K.3 to 36ºC. So it should cool a Raptor or any 7,200 RPM drive just fine.
I finally fitted my SilentStar and have to say the thing is awesome. My WD is completely inaudiable except for the faintest clicking when running a defrag! And this is a very, very loud drive!!
I did have to modify the unit slightly due to the restriction caused when using it in a large diameter tubing loop youu can see this here, but after I modded it the restriction is minimal and I would recommend it to anyone on a small ID tubing loop or that has the tools to do the relevent modifications
I did have to modify the unit slightly due to the restriction caused when using it in a large diameter tubing loop youu can see this here, but after I modded it the restriction is minimal and I would recommend it to anyone on a small ID tubing loop or that has the tools to do the relevent modifications
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2005 9:38 am
-
- Posts: 100
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:02 pm
- Location: Salisbury, UK
-
- Posts: 268
- Joined: Tue Mar 11, 2003 5:17 pm
- Location: Canada
-
- Posts: 100
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:02 pm
- Location: Salisbury, UK
I ordered 2 silentstars for my next system, one holds two drives and the other holds 1. www.snt-systems.com has them, $130 for the dual and $99 for the single. I bought most of my wc'ing stuff from him, only bad thing is that he does not keep alot of stuff on hand and he orders from Germany about every 2 months or so.
There is a place in Germany that does ship worldwide but I am not sure of how much shipping costs are. The website is http://www.computer-4you.at/
. After you find what you want (to get to the hd coolers first click on Wasserkühlung over on the left side of the webpage then click on " HDD-Kühler" . After you find what you want click on the web link to their export site at the top: http://www.it-trade.net/ . There you will find a email link. Just shoot them a email (yup, they do speak English ) and tell them what you want. The guy from snt-systems actually orders from the same place, he does get a resellers discount though.
Although I know people that have ordered directly with good luck I just order through snt-systems so I dont have to worry about lost shipments, customs hassles etc. As long as you are patient I would recomment the snt site.
There is a place in Germany that does ship worldwide but I am not sure of how much shipping costs are. The website is http://www.computer-4you.at/
. After you find what you want (to get to the hd coolers first click on Wasserkühlung over on the left side of the webpage then click on " HDD-Kühler" . After you find what you want click on the web link to their export site at the top: http://www.it-trade.net/ . There you will find a email link. Just shoot them a email (yup, they do speak English ) and tell them what you want. The guy from snt-systems actually orders from the same place, he does get a resellers discount though.
Although I know people that have ordered directly with good luck I just order through snt-systems so I dont have to worry about lost shipments, customs hassles etc. As long as you are patient I would recomment the snt site.
-
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Thu Mar 24, 2005 4:24 pm
- Location: Chi-Town
- Contact:
I really have to agree, It is far easier to cool a hard drive with a simple, effective heatsink assembly, it doesnt have to be ugly either, but HD blocks restrict flow and dont really make a difference, nearly identical results can be acheieved by a simple passive heatsink solution with some general air movement around in the case.ferdb wrote:My only experience with HD blocks is with the Koolance one. The experience was bad, it killed my drive. Since then I've just payed a little attention to airflow in the case so there is sufficient cooling on the drives. They aren't hard to cool even with very quiet case setups if you make sure they get decent airflow.
I agree with you, the main reason I did it was NOT to keep my drives cool but to help silence them. I keep my computer on top of my desk so I would like my hd's to be as quiet as possibe.Sanatarium wrote:I really have to agree, It is far easier to cool a hard drive with a simple, effective heatsink assembly, it doesnt have to be ugly either, but HD blocks restrict flow and dont really make a difference, nearly identical results can be acheieved by a simple passive heatsink solution with some general air movement around in the case.ferdb wrote:My only experience with HD blocks is with the Koolance one. The experience was bad, it killed my drive. Since then I've just payed a little attention to airflow in the case so there is sufficient cooling on the drives. They aren't hard to cool even with very quiet case setups if you make sure they get decent airflow.
-
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Thu Mar 24, 2005 4:24 pm
- Location: Chi-Town
- Contact: