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Thread: Koolance CPU-370 Water Block
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07-01-2011, 11:27 AM #1RSS_Poster Guest
Koolance CPU-370 Water Block
Does the latest CPU water block from Koolance compete with the EK HF water block? Keep reading to find out!
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07-01-2011, 03:26 PM #2
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07-01-2011, 03:41 PM #3
nice review thx, the only thing I didn't like about the product were the odd non standard screw heads keeping it together. I see someone trying to find a bit to take it apart and clean it when its gummed up. It would also be nice to have manufacturer's include a in line filter with the blocks.
fyi does anyone know of any inline filters for cooling loops?Setup:#1 Intel i7 2600k @ 4.7 GHz, Mobo: ASUS P8P67 Deluxe B3, Memory: Gskill Ripjaws 2133 2x4GB
Video card: Gigabyte 480GTX , PSU: NZXT 750W, HD: OCZ Vertex 4 120GB & 1x160GB WD, OS: Windows 7 64-bit Premium,LG 4x Blueray drive, Monitor: Samsung 1ms TOC 27", Case: AZZA Solano 1000, Liquid cooling: Zalman- LQ320


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07-01-2011, 04:20 PM #4
You can use the old school carburated fuel filters. The ones that operate at like 5psi. Not Fuel Injected filter. Make sure its plastic also not the metal jobby.
RIG:i7-3770k @4.6Ghz/ASUS P8Z77 Deluxe/GSkill DDR3-2400/2xHD7970/Vertex 4/SSonic Plat 1000/H100/HAF XB
Laptop: i7-3630/ 16GB (4x4) DDR3-1600/ HM77/ GTX 675MX@1050Mhz/ 128GB SSD/ 256GB Vector SSD/ 17in Matte/ Steel Series Keyboard/ Killer Networks/ 1080p
SERVER: E3-1240V2/TYAN S5512/Kingston DDR3-1600 ECC/LSI Mega9260-4i w/2xVertex4 256GB RAID0(VMFS Datastore)/Vertex3(System)/X650 SSonic Gold/ESXi 5.1
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07-02-2011, 03:18 AM #5
if you are using an approved liquid, why would you need a filter?
The path to universal understanding starts here: Say what you mean, and mean what you say.
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07-02-2011, 04:07 AM #6
Yeah, I wouldn't think a filter is needed as long as you use distilled water and some well known coolant. It would just cut down on your water circulation. From past experience though, it is better to have large toobing and as little obstruction as possible. Adding extra things to the loop can effect the performance.
Main System (X79 Beast):
Intel Core i7-3960X @ 4.6GHz | ASUS P9X79 WS | Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB (8x4GB) DDR3 1600MHz Memory Kit | Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 (Main Card) | GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 650 Ti OC 2GB (Dedicated PhysX card) | ASUS Xonar Xense Audio Card | NZXT Phantom 820 Case | CM Silent Pro Gold 1200W PSU | 2 x Kingston HyperX 240GB 3K SSDs in RAID 0 | 2x WD RE3 1TB Hard Drives | WD Caviar Blue 500GB Hard Drive (Back-up Storage) | Noctua NH-D14 CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Test Bench (X79 System):
Intel Core i7-3820 @ 4.6Ghz | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Kingston HyperX 16GB DDR3 2133MHz Memory Kit | XFX HD7870 | Aerocool Striker-X Air test bench | Rosewill Lightning 1300W | LSI 3ware 9750-8i SAS+SATA RAID Card | Kingston HyperX 240GB 5K SSD | Seagate 500GB Hard Drive | Thermaltake Frio OCK CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Laptop (Macbook Pro):
Intel Core i7-2720QM @ 2.2GHz (3.3GHz Turbo) | Kingston HyperX 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 | AMD Radeon HD 6750M 1GB (Dedicated Video Card) | Intel HD Graphics 3000 512MB (Integrated) | Zalman N128GB SSD | Hitachi 500GB 7200 RPM Hard Drive | Mac OS X 10.8.2

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