On The Bench This Morning:
AiO CPU Cooler Periodic Maintenance
Y'all may have noticed the dwagon hasn't been around stirring sh...tuff up this morning... I've been a little busy.
Since I have the CPU out of my PC anyways, I figured now was a good time to do periodic maintenance on the cooler in my Gaming/VR machine
This kind of nonsense is why I built my own.
It's been running for quite a while now, and since I use auto coolant, corrosion isn't an issue. Evaporation is glacially slow, I looked at the header tank the other day and it looks like I may need to top it up in a few more years.
It was also much cheaper.
Every word of this is just... wrong.
Auto coolant is not proof against corrosion; where in the world did you get that idea...? This cooler uses common household ethylene glycol automotive coolant, with very little dilution.
The jelly boogers are a byproduct of this kind of coolant, and they happen in any motor vehicle, any liquid-cooled device that uses it. Your cooler will need exactly this kind of periodic service as well, or the cooling block and several other places in the system will clog up. If you use the pink/orange OAT coolant, it is even worse for making those jelly boogers.
I've been doing liquid-cooling of PCs for decades... going back to the original Pentiums and Athlons, so I know exactly how much it costs to DIY this stuff, even if you start with a junkyard heater core for a rad. I highly doubt you built your own for "much less" than $60.
Cheers,
mnem
*beginning to think that "sharing" wasn't such a good idea...*
Please re-read what I actually said.
I said corrosion is not an issue, and it isn't, and it won't be, for the life of this system. I did not say it was "corrosion proof".
Why?
Because this is a PC cooler, and not a car. The environment in which it operates is completely different.
The temperatures and pressures are considerably lower than in a car, and it is those conditions which are the primary cause of coolant degradation.
As for cost, I used a £15 pump with integrated header tank, a £7.99 80x80 radiator, icr the cost of the CPU block, but it was probably around £10, the food grade silicone tubing was £7 for 2 metres iirc. I don't know what the cost of the coolant would be; it's too small an amount to worry about (if you already have some due to car ownership etc).
The only problems I have had, are when I first filled it, I spilled some coolant because I wasn't expecting the system to fill as quickly as it did, and the sensors for the cheap eBay digital thermometers sometimes fall off since I only stuck them on with insulation tape.
The only maintenance it has needed so far has been to have the radiator vacced out when it gets choked with fluff. That's in a period of 8 years or so.
I don't care how long you've been building liquid cooled PCs, this is how I built mine, the cost and reliability are as stated, and the only input to the design that wasn't mine was to run the pump at full speed and only run the radiator fan on PWM. Most of the time it is so quiet as to be inaudible.
Okay, okay... I guess this is going to boil down to semantics. First off... your cost was £40, so approx US$58 before taxes and shipping; definitely not "much cheaper". I'm going to assume for the sake of argument here you meant a 120x120 radiator (mine are 120x240, both of 'em), as I don't believe anybody even makes a 80x80 radiator.
That might just about cool a mouse-sized go-kart.
Next, your system and mine use the same coolant, the same kind of aluminum rad, and (unless you bought the absolute shit-cheapest one you could find) the same kind of micro-groove copper heat-sink in the CPU block as my cooler. The only functional difference is whether the pump is integral in the same housing, which makes precisely zero difference here.
Bottom line is if you use any kind of ethylene glycol coolant, those jelly boogers are going to happen sooner or later. Anyone who habitually works with the stuff knows this, as does pretty much anyone who habitually liquid-cools PCs.
Have you actually taken your CPU block apart and looked inside?
mnem