Hey guys, fairly new member here, figured I'd toss up a log of the upgrade from my virgin water build. So this is my second water loop. I'm 43, been building systems for years, but never got into water until recently. Now I'm hooked! WARNING: I am a complete noob STILL, and I'm not good with tools! So you won't see any fancy fabrication in THIS thread, LOL! You'll see a ton of idiot mistakes involving alcohol and stupidity though. 
The first build, being a rookie water loop, was rather awful:

That build consisted of:
Corsair 800D case / AX750W power suppy
Asus Rampage IV Gene mobo with i3820 and XSPC Raystorm block
16GB Corsair Dominator Plantinum 1866 RAM
Sapphire Radeon 7950 (non reference) with AlphaCool NexXxos V2 block
XSPC EX360 rad in the roof, 3 Coolermaster SickleFlow fans in pull / intake
XSPC EX140 rad in the rear exhaust area, 140mm Bitfenix fan in pull / exhaust
XSPC dual bay reservoir with dual D5 variable pumps
FrozenQ helix reservoir / blood red
It was ugly as hell, had no proper drainage OR fill mechanisms, and basically retarded on any number of levels. I even ended up putting the tube res on it's side to set up a drain:

LOL! Hard not to face-palm myself looking at that pic.
I made so many mistakes! The drain worked well enough though. The whole system worked well performance-wise. I had no complaints about temps. But then I got the itch for a 2nd GPU, which would probably mean I need more rad. Using that logic as an excuse, I bought a Case Labs M8 cube:

I've always wanted a cube. The idea of having an entire half of your case to hide the cable mess in appeals to me. Cable management ISN'T one of my skills.
The M8 comes with stuff, lots of stuff:

It looks so empty back then. Has THAT ever changed:

Got the XXL window:

Also added a second 7950 into the mix, a reference 7950 this time:

Now both my cards have boobs:

I was kinda bored with the FrozenQ tube res, and not really enjoying the lack of port options on mine. So I spent some cash on some sexy German hardware and bought an Aqualis 800ml tube reservoir and a Watercool Heatkiller GPU block for the new 7950:

I got those parts from Dazmode.com. Daz rocks.

Heatkiller installed and looking awesome:

Backplate installed and also looking awesome:

Large tube is large. I named it "TubeZilla":

TubeZilla says "this M8 is tiny":

I also decided to ditch my XSPC bay res, and do something different with my twin D5s:


Of course, I bought that M8 with rad expansion in mind. Very specific expansion! Monstrous expansion!

Alphacool Monsta 360s. Rads be phat, yo:

Also got Daz to send me some good fans for the new rads, Gentle Typhoon AP45s:

Seeing how much room I have to play with:

Flirted with using some Triebwerk fans for a minute, decided nah:

Also bought a spare D5 / box reservoir for external testing:

Wow, this case is a touch smaller than I had envisioned:

That's my own stupid fault of course. Once I placed the tube, I realized I wasn't going to have enough room to mount both D5s in their own mount kits. I just didn't have the space. DOH! My Aqualis tube also didn't come with a pump mount. So I contacted Shoggy @ AquaComputer, and bought a D5 mount for TubeZilla, directly from them:

Rigged up a little stand-up box for TubeZilla testing:

After thinking about it, I decided TubeZilla needed to be floor mounted somehow. The mounting plate that comes with the tube is for a wall mount. I couldn't see that working well inside the M8, and didn't relish the idea of drilling coles in a case that cost me $750CDN. So I decided TubeZilla will get feet:

$5 a pair brackets from Canadian Tire. Once I drill proper holes, these will do nicely:

I spent a ton of time thinking about the tubing run, and trying different things. Both Monstas are mounted on the power supply side of the case, with the idea being to use the EX360 rad over the motherboard, as it was in the 800D. It turned out the easiest run from the motherboard side on top was straight down to the bottom Monsta:

Then across and up to the top Monsta:

That made the most sense to me. Diagonal runs were out, as I needed to move that HDD cage in and out. That cage would be full too. Given all the junk that was going in there, this seemed like the cleanest tube route.
Then the top Monsta would run to the mobo side like so:

To the pumps / tube res:

I used old clear tube to measure the distances I needed before cutting up the good stuff, PrimoChill advanced LRT in red:

Trying to figure out the tube / 2nd pump placement:

Can anyone spot the disastrous noob miscalculation in that above pic? I made a serious dunce move that picture hints at. More on that later.
My little pump / tube combo ended up badly:

I heat shrunk the feet with thick stuff, for camo and vibration damping. I also made a royal mess of the mounting holes on the back AND the bottom, so TubeZilla never sat properly. So I went back to the drawing board and spend another $5 on new brackets, and another $8 on spray paint:

I messed up the mounting holes AGAIN (totally SUCK with tools), but it wasn't as bad this time:

TubeZilla sits MUCH better, and looks nicer with painted feet. Also painted the 2nd D5 mount:

Future disastrous noob mistake evidenced again:

More tube finalizing, or so I thought:

I almost forgot that I picked up an NZXT HUE RGB LED strip / controller. After finding it hidden under a pile of boxes, I decided to install it. The power cable would be run nicely hidden beside the bottom Monsta, and connect here (case rear):

From the case rear, straight up below the motherboard to the front:

Up the case front:

Across the case top, and down the back over to the power supply side, where it ends:

Lights, camera, action:

Speaking of lights, TubeZilla also needs some. It has 6 LED holes in the base. I only used 4. I started out by stripping some XSPC red LEDs I had:

After looking around for some black heat shrink that would be thick enough for the LEDS, I only found one strip thick enough. Of course, it HAD to be pink:

It'll be hidden anyway, mostly. Wiring em up:

Done:

Uh oh, we're down a light:

Until we lift the power cable UP that is:

A messy pile of parts, including the next thing to be installed, XSPC water temp sensors:

Temp sensor #1 (cold) will go right before the first pump:

Temp sensor #2 (hot) will attach to the top EX360 rad, with the CPU output going into it:

Temp sensor test:


The first build, being a rookie water loop, was rather awful:

That build consisted of:
Corsair 800D case / AX750W power suppy
Asus Rampage IV Gene mobo with i3820 and XSPC Raystorm block
16GB Corsair Dominator Plantinum 1866 RAM
Sapphire Radeon 7950 (non reference) with AlphaCool NexXxos V2 block
XSPC EX360 rad in the roof, 3 Coolermaster SickleFlow fans in pull / intake
XSPC EX140 rad in the rear exhaust area, 140mm Bitfenix fan in pull / exhaust
XSPC dual bay reservoir with dual D5 variable pumps
FrozenQ helix reservoir / blood red
It was ugly as hell, had no proper drainage OR fill mechanisms, and basically retarded on any number of levels. I even ended up putting the tube res on it's side to set up a drain:

LOL! Hard not to face-palm myself looking at that pic.


I've always wanted a cube. The idea of having an entire half of your case to hide the cable mess in appeals to me. Cable management ISN'T one of my skills.
The M8 comes with stuff, lots of stuff:

It looks so empty back then. Has THAT ever changed:

Got the XXL window:

Also added a second 7950 into the mix, a reference 7950 this time:

Now both my cards have boobs:

I was kinda bored with the FrozenQ tube res, and not really enjoying the lack of port options on mine. So I spent some cash on some sexy German hardware and bought an Aqualis 800ml tube reservoir and a Watercool Heatkiller GPU block for the new 7950:

I got those parts from Dazmode.com. Daz rocks.


Heatkiller installed and looking awesome:

Backplate installed and also looking awesome:

Large tube is large. I named it "TubeZilla":

TubeZilla says "this M8 is tiny":

I also decided to ditch my XSPC bay res, and do something different with my twin D5s:


Of course, I bought that M8 with rad expansion in mind. Very specific expansion! Monstrous expansion!

Alphacool Monsta 360s. Rads be phat, yo:

Also got Daz to send me some good fans for the new rads, Gentle Typhoon AP45s:

Seeing how much room I have to play with:

Flirted with using some Triebwerk fans for a minute, decided nah:

Also bought a spare D5 / box reservoir for external testing:

Wow, this case is a touch smaller than I had envisioned:

That's my own stupid fault of course. Once I placed the tube, I realized I wasn't going to have enough room to mount both D5s in their own mount kits. I just didn't have the space. DOH! My Aqualis tube also didn't come with a pump mount. So I contacted Shoggy @ AquaComputer, and bought a D5 mount for TubeZilla, directly from them:

Rigged up a little stand-up box for TubeZilla testing:

After thinking about it, I decided TubeZilla needed to be floor mounted somehow. The mounting plate that comes with the tube is for a wall mount. I couldn't see that working well inside the M8, and didn't relish the idea of drilling coles in a case that cost me $750CDN. So I decided TubeZilla will get feet:

$5 a pair brackets from Canadian Tire. Once I drill proper holes, these will do nicely:

I spent a ton of time thinking about the tubing run, and trying different things. Both Monstas are mounted on the power supply side of the case, with the idea being to use the EX360 rad over the motherboard, as it was in the 800D. It turned out the easiest run from the motherboard side on top was straight down to the bottom Monsta:

Then across and up to the top Monsta:

That made the most sense to me. Diagonal runs were out, as I needed to move that HDD cage in and out. That cage would be full too. Given all the junk that was going in there, this seemed like the cleanest tube route.
Then the top Monsta would run to the mobo side like so:

To the pumps / tube res:

I used old clear tube to measure the distances I needed before cutting up the good stuff, PrimoChill advanced LRT in red:

Trying to figure out the tube / 2nd pump placement:

Can anyone spot the disastrous noob miscalculation in that above pic? I made a serious dunce move that picture hints at. More on that later.


I heat shrunk the feet with thick stuff, for camo and vibration damping. I also made a royal mess of the mounting holes on the back AND the bottom, so TubeZilla never sat properly. So I went back to the drawing board and spend another $5 on new brackets, and another $8 on spray paint:

I messed up the mounting holes AGAIN (totally SUCK with tools), but it wasn't as bad this time:

TubeZilla sits MUCH better, and looks nicer with painted feet. Also painted the 2nd D5 mount:

Future disastrous noob mistake evidenced again:

More tube finalizing, or so I thought:

I almost forgot that I picked up an NZXT HUE RGB LED strip / controller. After finding it hidden under a pile of boxes, I decided to install it. The power cable would be run nicely hidden beside the bottom Monsta, and connect here (case rear):

From the case rear, straight up below the motherboard to the front:

Up the case front:

Across the case top, and down the back over to the power supply side, where it ends:

Lights, camera, action:

Speaking of lights, TubeZilla also needs some. It has 6 LED holes in the base. I only used 4. I started out by stripping some XSPC red LEDs I had:

After looking around for some black heat shrink that would be thick enough for the LEDS, I only found one strip thick enough. Of course, it HAD to be pink:

It'll be hidden anyway, mostly. Wiring em up:

Done:

Uh oh, we're down a light:

Until we lift the power cable UP that is:

A messy pile of parts, including the next thing to be installed, XSPC water temp sensors:

Temp sensor #1 (cold) will go right before the first pump:

Temp sensor #2 (hot) will attach to the top EX360 rad, with the CPU output going into it:

Temp sensor test:
