Water Cooling and Fishtanks?
mikeb55121 asks: "Today I
was refilling my fish tank and was thinking about water cooling for
my computer. As I spilled the water on the ground I realized that
I was pouring cold water in to my fish tank and that I had tropical
fish and right then it struck me! If I could just hook up my fish
tank and computer together so that it would use watercooling by using
the water out of the fish tank to cool the processor and then go back
in to the tank and keep them warm. In my head it works out just fine
however I don't know if it would be practical in reality.
If such is possible, it would be pretty tight since it would keep my
processor, fish and me happy, all at one time! If any one actually is
going to try this, please email me, as I would like to hear about your
results and to know if an idea of mine actually works for once!" An
interesting thought! If any of you have pulled something like this off,
please share. (And post pictures if you've got 'em!)
These will get you started. The first and second links look very handy to your situation. They deal with water cooling and using a fishtank pump to pump the water over the CPU core using a home-made heat sink.
t ml
http://www.agaweb.com/coolcpu/build.htm
http://www.overclockers.com.au/techstuff/wc1/
http://www.gibtek.co.uk/hardware/watercooling.h
Does the name Pavlov ring a bell?
From everything I've read about Marine tanks it's the opposite way around - Marine tanks often need expensive coolers while Tropical fish tanks need heaters. Maybe it's because I'm looking at coral reef tanks (think mega lamps for the coral) and not fish only marine but I don't know any tropical fish owners who have $1,200 coolers... We've had Discus fish (like blue gills but from the Amazon) and they have quite a high temperature requirement (72? 75?).
As for the project - I'm not sure about it but one thing I'd definately do is have high flow rate and large diameter tubes. Fish crap is going to build up in that thing - especially if it is a slow flow. If the processor is a high temp AMD you might be cooking fish crap. Not good in terms of cooling and bacteria counts...
I've never tried doing this with a CPU, and am not sure what your fish can tolerate. Find out what the ideal temp for the fish is, then stick them in a smaller tank and run your CPU on full tilt (think SETI@home or the Bovine project) for 24 hours. Watch the temp of the CPU and the tank. Your CPU should have some setup to bring itself down if the temp gets too high, and this fish tank really won't matter too much because you won't have the fish in it - right?
It should be fine, even with a smaller tank. A 55 gallon tank ought be near nothing. For tank lighting (if you do that), get some lights that don't generate heat. You should also have a tank heater if your fish needed it before. You CPU running at it's max constantly should still not come within more than one degree of what the fish is willing to tolerate.
SIG: HUP