UPDATE
So before i mentioned i screwed up my spray paint. I worked out that it must have been because the spray caught my finger on the way out the can and thus caused a drip on the can, this then dried and block it. Bit of a daft mistake but this is my first attempt at spraying/modding etc so its all a bit , 'have a go and see what happens' kinda ethos.
The deliveries include:
Plastikote- my choice of easy spray paint that doesn't require much prep and is fairly durable.
Cheap Tube cutters- Just go slow and they work a treat.
White electrical tape- Dont need this rubbish anymore, it was awful tape anyway.
Fittings- Some fittings that i used to test some different loops. (more on this later)
So here are the new deliveries:
Silencer- Dispite, as i said before, not using this 'silencer' for the front fan, this is what it looks like fitted and sprayed black.
The large gap it forms
Tubing, routing, piping, testing
So it has got to the point now where the case is fairly well prep'd for accepting some cooling components. At this stage i was still planning on only cooling the CPU. Hopefully it will become clear why i eventually chose to cool the GPU as well. So, at this stage, i only had a 360mm rad to fit. The in/out holes are both at the same end which is pretty standard and i always though that having that end at the front of the case, hidden in the drive bays, would be most tidy. As it works out, that is actually a fairly messy way of doing it for me because it means running the hose out and round the bottom of the bays. This looked fairly ugly in testing so I opted to have the in//out at the rear of the case.
(Looking back a this part of the build is fairly embarrassing for me because some of the ideas i had are simply horrendous and ugly and i can't believe i even considered them but bare with me, it gets better I promise.)
Rad i/o at the back of the case
Some initial pump ideas
Some foam for damping
All fairly ugly i think you'll agree. With only two screws on the white plastic it was pretty wobbly too. I also forgot about the HDD cage which sits just in front of this area and sitting as it is in the last picture, the cage wouldn't fit.
Scrapping the awful plastic, i found a piece of spare mesh from my project where i put a ps3 and xbox into a pc case. (It was infact hush 2, TTL's favourite case! LOL) I thought it might look a little better sat in the bottom of the case but low and behold, still ugly as hell.
Next onto Tubing
So here is a little creative splash i made at my house at uni. Had a tonne of ideas and most were fairly bad but i wanted the front of the case as free from tubing as possible so i can see the expensive stuff.
Another 'artsy' shot for good measure
Through most of this testing process i tried to avoid cutting the tube because i didn't want to end up with bits that were too short. The idea of trying to keep the tubing away from the front side meant trying to hide one half of the route around the sides or back of the case.
So from the rad it goes up, to hide at the top of the case
Round the top and front- Excuse the toilet shot, complete accident.
Then would come to the pump. (into not past the pump)
The whole image- Assuming the cut out is cpu.
Once the door is on, the long tubing route would be invisible so it does hide it nicely. But when the door is off, it just isn't practical. Im sure anyone that has done this before can tell this is just an awful idea in so many ways.
The Return Journey.
At this stage i had some external input and in came the revolution of trying to get the return journey hidden behind the 5.25 bays or behind the motherboard.
Lots of fitting (and increased leak chance) were required to get the tube back behind the bays and hidden away.
Up the hidden side front of the case
Through a cut out that fits the tubing perfectly.
Many more fittings to receive the tubing again.
This 'alternate route' is, again, very impractical and just generally useless.
At this point i needed and excuse as to why i couldn't get a decent route going. And the reason is...
My Pump/Res
This has caused me problems like never before because it doesn't seem to have been manufactured quite right. Normally the input and output come out the same side but on mine they come out opposite, or if i turn the black section upside down, at 90 degrees to each other. As it turns out, this came to be quite a nice feature of my case IMO, and it works nicely with the way i have set up my rig.
With a half decent excuse under my belt i decided to have another go.
The 5.25 method.
The idea here was to have a vertical raise from the pump and go straight up into the 5.25 bays
. By having the rad turned the other way round (i/o in the 5.25 bays) i could go straight into the rad from the pump. The pump may be a little crooked but it would be straight if i actually used this method. I would need another hole if i did this and i would be sacrificing some the of the bays but that doesn't matter too much.
Straight into the bays.
From the front
And into the rad. I would have got a better fitting to go here if i used this method. But i didnt in the end.
From another angle
SUMMARY
So that just about concludes all my poor attempts of tubing. I know they are all pretty naff but this is my first attempt and it was just not a great day for ideas. I think it was around this stage i decided to go ahead and watercool my GPU as well. This means the loop will be much more standard as 'The Return Journey' will come back through the gpu, and i have another rad to take out the pile of rubbish plastic I put in the front of the case.
I hope you are all enjoying the log so far an thanks very much to those that are commenting. I am rewriting the whole log so it takes some motivation from extra comments to keep me going
Til next time...