xeks said:
Okay that sounds good. In the mean time would you be able to refer me to any sites that I could read up on like what a 180 dual vs 180 triple. Is and such? That's what confuses me the most is the radiator types, which all I know is I want at least a 240 mm rad for the top and or the bottom. And there are so many d5 variant pumps. Thanks!
When people talk about
radiator size what they mean is the fan size and length of radiator. So an 120mm rad is designed for 120mm fans, if it is a triple rad then it is long enough for three fans, like so:
http://flyingsuicide.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/ibuypower-triple-radiator-1.jpg
Problem with that is you get no indication of the
depth of the radiator, which is very important obviously because a deep radiator is better than a narrow one. It's actually better to describe it in the format LxD, i.e. 360x60mm, AKA a triple 120mm radiator, 60mm deep.
There are 140mm rads and an 180mm rad has just entered the market too. Whilst the radiators themselves are absolutely fine the choice of decent fans is much more limited for those sizes.
As for pumps. What you'll find is that there are basically only two types. The Laing DDC which looks like this:
http://static.scan.co.uk/images/products/1472188-a.jpg
and the D5 which looks like this:
http://www.dangerden.com/store/images/D/d5_front_view_800w-01.jpg
Broadly speaking they are designed for slightly different purposes. The DDC is a higher pressure (known as the pressure head), lower lph pump (litres per hour, flow rate) and the D5 is lower pressure, higher flow rate.
In truth there isn't much to split them apart because the D5's pressure is more than enough for several waterblocks (making the DDC's extra pressure redundant) but equally the LLCs flow rate is more than high enough to make any extra LPH redundant (water only heats up a tiny bit when it is pumped around - extra flow rate only matters when the water is totally saturated by heat - which won't happen). I have my 2 DDCs running at 7v (about 4-500LPH) and if I ran them flat out (7-800LPH) I see literally no change in temperatures but I get a whole lot of noise.
The D5 has a 'vario' version which has a 5 speed selectable switch. Generally putting it at 3 will give you silent running and more than enough flow and pressure. The DDC doesn't have a selector but
you can just run it off a 7v cable and get the same effect (as you can the non 'vario' model of the D5 too).
Generally the D5 is considered superior.
After that all you've got are aftermarket pump tops and reservoirs supplied by different people like phobya and XSPC and EK. The pumps are principally the same. Performance is more than enough with either pump - I'd suggest you work on keeping the rig silent. With that in mind you want a big enough radiator so that the fans can spin slower and you want to noise insulate the pump. So here's what I would do in your situation:
CPU block - I'd get an
XSPC raystorm although there are a few good blocks out there from other's like EK.
Radiator - Since the top of the 810 can mount 140mm rads I'd take advantage and get a
Phobya G-changer 420x60 rad.
Fans - The 140mm fan issue is solved with these babies from Corsair. I've chosen the
low RPM edition which come with a 7v resistor cable. Mount these on the top of the case pulling air out (at RPMs under about 1300 this is more effective than push).
Pump - This is where things get tricky. On the face of it you have 2 options:
A. Optical drive res. Very neat and space efficient. You can get the
D5 and the
DDC like this. It will a tiny bit more noisy than the next option.
B. This option will need mounting somewhere else in the case, like on the floor under the HDD bays.
You'll need a
dampening mat to stick to the bottom of the case.
Then you need the pump and pump top like
this D5. Just stick this to the mat.
Finally you'll need a reservoir. Something sexy and easy to mount
like this. If you went the DDC route it is easier to get that all together by purchasing something
like this.
After that it's just tubing, coolant and barbs.
Take a look at get back to us with the bits that you like. You can't actually go far wrong and much of it will come down to how you want it to look.