Transporting a Watercooled PC

Deshman

New member
Hey guys, you were so helpful when I set up my watercooling I thought I'd ask your advice before moving it. I need to transport my PC from one end of the country to another, the whole journey will be about 6 hours by car. What would you recommend doing to the watercooling before I pack up my PC into its box and send it on its merry way?
 
Are you driving? Will you be with the pc? I left the liquid in mine and put the seatbelt round the case lol, but I was only going a few miles.

Long journey i'd pack it up nicely, ensure it cant fall over and just go for it.

You could drain the loop if you are worried.
 
name='Deshman' said:
Hey guys, you were so helpful when I set up my watercooling I thought I'd ask your advice before moving it. I need to transport my PC from one end of the country to another, the whole journey will be about 6 hours by car. What would you recommend doing to the watercooling before I pack up my PC into its box and send it on its merry way?

Remove the setup and rebuild @ destination
 
Personally I'd just pack it up in a box and wedge it upright somewhere in the back seat of your car.

When you get to the destination, leave it a few hours to settle (water may be all frothy and shook up), then just make sure there is no leakage before you turn it on.
 
Usually if it's a full tower, I whack it behind the passenger seat and slide seat right back to clamp it between back of seat and front of the rear seat...

If you're not driving it there and it's being shipped or transported somewhere where you can't keep an eye on it, drain it first and refill at the other end. Wouldn't bother leaving it a few hours to settle. Pump'll just churn it back up again... it'll settle just as quickly running as off... so just plug it in at the other end, fill it up, fire it up.
 
Lot of conflicting advice there but the general idea seems to be whack it behind the passenger seat, which I was thinking of doing but slapped myself on the hand for even thinking. It's the Thermaltake Kandalf Watercooled case and I think I've still got the GIANT box with the foam inserts so that should count as packaging. Hopefully it'll still fit in my car once it's in the box :p
 
I personally wouldn risk that length of journey with it inside the case ... as said id remove it and pack it in a separate box (still assembled) and just smack it back in ..

then of course i also do this with ne exceedingly large heatsinks
 
From personal experience you will be safe leaving the water in the loop as long as you keep the case upright and wedged properly.

I once shipped a case and watercooling bits minus PC hardware fully assembled via UPS across the country and when it got to the other end it was perfect, no leakage, perfect ready to be rebuilt and ready to rock.

My vote is for just whackin', wedgin', and drivin'!
 
Only just thought about this, going to be transporting my PC every 3 or 4 months. usually stick it behind the car seat so should be ok with w/c in it anyway, I hope!
 
It will be fine! ;)

If you trust your loop to run while the PC is on then you should trust it when it is off.

Ham had a piccar of one of his loops and he was holding it by the pump in mid-air.

Just goes to show how strong a well built loop is.

If you think you have done a good job on your loop then I am sure it will be fine. :D
 
name='Toxcity' said:
It will be fine! ;)

If you trust your loop to run while the PC is on then you should trust it when it is off.

Ham had a piccar of one of his loops and he was holding it by the pump in mid-air.

Just goes to show how strong a well built loop is.

If you think you have done a good job on your loop then I am sure it will be fine. :D

Might give it a quick nip with a spanner just for good luck :p
 
Best thing to do is drain it IMHO. That's where a T-line comes in handy :)

It will probably need bleeding again anyway, so why not just remove the possibility of leaks too?
 
name='mojo' said:
Best thing to do is drain it IMHO. That's where a T-line comes in handy :)

It will probably need bleeding again anyway, so why not just remove the possibility of leaks too?

Why would it need bleeding again?
 
We move "Alot" of PC's all around the country for LAN's and demo purposes mostly no using flight cases but back in the day the best low cost way was to wrap the case in a quilt and then put a bin bag over and wedge it making sure it cant tip over.

Do that and your sorted :D
 
name='Aqua-Pc's' said:
We move "Alot" of PC's all around the country for LAN's and demo purposes mostly no using flight cases but back in the day the best low cost way was to wrap the case in a quilt and then put a bin bag over and wedge it making sure it cant tip over.

Do that and your sorted :D

Nice one cheers :)
 
name='Deshman' said:
Why would it need bleeding again?

All the water sloshing around could introduce air bubbles, or dislodge existing ones. In my experience moving a water cooled system it tends to happen, especially if you have a res.
 
name='mojo' said:
All the water sloshing around could introduce air bubbles, or dislodge existing ones. In my experience moving a water cooled system it tends to happen, especially if you have a res.

Don't worry, kept upright I'm sure it should stay fine in a car.
 
name='Deshman' said:
Don't worry, kept upright I'm sure it should stay fine in a car.

I got a few bubbles just moving from room to room. I think a T-Line system would fare better though.
 
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