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Water Cooled Power Supply

lmd writes "Digital-Explosion has an article with step-by-step instructions on how to cool a power supply with water (yes, water) instead of fans/heatsinks to make it quieter. Please read the warning and disclaimer (and buy insurance if you don't have any) if you decide to try this at home."

30 of 279 comments (clear)

  1. Water cooled? What wusses by Hairy_Potter · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm holding out for a liquid sodium cooled computer, just like valves on decent cars.

    1. Re:Water cooled? What wusses by Guppy06 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Heck, go for broke. Use a combination of sodium and water.

  2. Digital Explosion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well I guess a site called Digital Explosion is really the best suited to report this.

  3. Toilet-Water CPU (and PSU) Cooler by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's a thought I had, but probably will never get around to building.

    Lots of people go to the expense and effort of building/buying radiators or using large tanks of water as the heatsink for their water-based CPU cooler systems.

    Last year, I started measuring the temperature of the water in my toilet tank. After a flush, it drops to 5-6 degrees Celsius. Between flushes, it gradually reaches room temperature, of course, but this is still no worse than a radiator or bucket. In practice, however, it never actually gets above about 10C (while room temperature is about 20C).

    In other words, it's a supply of cold water which you were going to simply flush away.

    Place a small bucket inside the toilet tank. Put a submersible pump in there, run the water to the CPU coolers, bring the water back and drain it over the bucket in the tank.

    Everytime you flush the 6 beers you went through while flaming me for my Linux isn't ready for the desktop article, you can rest assured that the water which cools your CPU is being replaced with fresh, cold water. No mold, no mildew.

    The purpose of putting the pump in the bucket is so that there's always a supply of water for the pump, even during the flush. And the purpose of draining the return line over the bucket is so that if your toilet tank doesn't refill for some reason, you'll still keep your bucket full of water and buy some time for hardware monitors to shut the system down if it's getting too warm.

    I don't know how hot the water in the toilet will get, but think about this:

    • The bucket full of water in the toilet tank is replaced during each flush but isn't actually available for a flush. You'll save water.
    • You'll be removing the CPU-heated water from the house and will therefore reduce the load on your air conditioning system.
    • You get to piss on the scourge of the overclocker, that excess CPU heat.
    • Warming liquids enhances their ability to dissolve things, including ...dark matter. You might have to clean the toilet less often.

    Of course, the only thing I'd worry about is the quality of the submersible pump. After all, if water leaked into the pump, then the water in the toilet could come into contact with one side of the AC line... the other side of which is grounded to your fusebox. If you happened to touch another grounded object while urinating (concrete floor, sink faucet, etc), then enough current could find that your stream of urine and urethral tissues are a more attractive ground path than the plastic sewer pipe. I think I'd invest in an isolation transformer (search ebay) to reduce the risk of highly ...unpleasant... damage.

    I think if one were pumping water through tubes soldered to the heatsinks of their power supply, the risks would be compounded, conceivably by a failure on the primary side of the power supply: I think I'd make a point of running the computer on an isolation transformer as well.

    Ahh... the joys of being an eccentric genius.

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
    1. Re:Toilet-Water CPU (and PSU) Cooler by HisMother · · Score: 5, Funny

      > Place a small bucket inside the toilet tank. Put a submersible pump in there, run the water to the CPU coolers, bring the water back and drain it over the bucket in the tank.
      OK, this takes care of the terminal in my powder room. How about the rest of the network? Maybe I could have a toilet installed in my office. Come to think of it that's not such a bad idea...

      --
      Cantankerous old coot since 1957.
  4. Relatively slashdotted... (alternative site) by $$$$$exyGal · · Score: 4, Informative
    I was getting intermittent CGI errors.

    Here's another site that discusses water cooling your system.

    --sexygal

    --
    Very popular slashdot journal for adul
  5. Geez by EvilStein · · Score: 5, Funny

    9 minutes later, and it's Slashdotted already.

    I guess those water cooled things *still* don't hold up.

    Some web server somewhere has probably just evaporated in a cloud of steam.

  6. hmmmm by Phosphor3k · · Score: 4, Funny
    CGI-limits reached, please try again later!
    If thats what happens when I water cool my PSU, forget that!
  7. copy of article by 10+Speed · · Score: 5, Informative

    WARNING : All power supplies have capacitors in them. These components can hold an electrical charge for days even weeks. We do not recommend that anyone opens up their Power Supply unless they do know what they are doing and are willing to take responsibility for their actions.

    DISCLAIMER : The author of this article and the owner of this page are not responsible or liable for any damage caused to any equipment or persons. In attempting what is detailed below you are taking full responsility for your actions.

    A Brief Introduction

    When I went about water-cooling my first PSU, I was learning as I went along so now I've had the experience, I'm in a better position to do a decent job. In this article I'll go through, step-by-step, showing you how to water-cool your PSU from scratch! I started off with a nice little QTec 550W PSU :

    If you've read the first article I wrote on water-cooling your PSU (which was aimed more at inspiring people than being a step-by-step guide), you'll know that my basic plan is quite simple. Basically, it involves replacing the fans / heatsinks with plates of copper. Each plate has a copper pipe soldered to it which is where the water runs to remove the heat. We'll get to that later - for now lets look at taking this thing apart.

    Disassembly

    If you have any doubts, this is the time to think again. As with just about every mod on this site, the first thing to do is void your warranty :D While that little sticker's intact, you can go and whine at your supplier if/when it goes bang. In any case, I'm not afraid so lets get stuck in :

    Four tiny screws later and the top should be loose. If you're doing this to a different PSU, you may find there's a fifth screw near the base - there was one on my old AOpen PSU. Here it is, guts exposed :

    Now the whole point of water-cooling the thing was to make it quieter so lets go ahead and get rid of those pesky fans :

    I found that Q-Tec had been very helpful and given each fan a little connector that can easily be removed. Here's what you should have after removing the noisy beasts :

    Noisy though the fans are, your PSU isn't going to work for very long without some kind of cooling. At this point you should be able to see the two heatsinks we're going to replace. Attatched to the sinks, you'll see rows of components - these are the really hot bits in your PSU and it's these that we'll be cooling. Now if we're going to replace the heatsinks with our water-cooled plates we need access to said components. There's two steps to this. First we need to remove the four screws that hold the main board of the PSU :

    Next we need to remove the little board that attatches to the connector where you plug your PSU into the wall. If you don't do this, you'll have to bend the back of the PSU to get the board out!

    Okay, all being well, you should have a fully disassembled unit :

    The next step is a little more tricky. We need to get those heatsinks off those components but unfortunately, you won't be able to get to the screws that hold them on. So what do we do? Un-solder them of course :) Look carefully at the bottom of the board and then double-check the top surface. You should be able to work out which joints on the base correspond to the components on the other side. All the components have three legs which makes life a little easier. I've found quite often that the heatsinks have an additional soldered connection or two to help keep them attatched to the board. Here's a couple of pics of the components and the base of the board :

    Right, lets get the first heatsink off :

    With a little more de-soldering, here's the second one removed as well :

    Removing the components and attatching them to the new water-cooled plates is a doddle. Just remember two points when doing this :

    1) Whatever you do, DON'T FORGET what order the components went in - it could be disastrous if you got them mixed up!

    2) Be careful when re-attatching, not to leave out the Mica shims (the grey pads). These stop you getting mains voltages going through the heatsink or water-block so they're pretty goddamn important!

    Here you can see them attatched to the water-block I made :

    If you're wondering how to get the holes on your block in just the right place, do what I did and use the heatsink you took off earlier as a template :D

    Re-assembling the beast

    The next step is to re-attatch the components to the board :

    Now I run an XP in my machine and I have no intention of moving to Intel so the P4 connector's just taking up space in my machine. The same is true of the old ATX connector so I got rid of 'em :

    Next it's time to implement a very handy bit of kit which makes water-cooling a little safer and easier. When you turn on your machine you don't want to have to remember to turn your pump on - if you forget, your liable to burn your chip! So what can you do to get around this? The answers simple - a 12v relay. Basically, when the computer starts, the 12v line coming out of the PC goes from 0 to 12v which closes the relay, starting the pump. I also find it useful to have an overide switch so you can pulse the pump on and off (to get rid of any trapped air in the system). Here's a quick diagram of the way my circuit works :

    Apologies for my poor photochop skillz :/ Having soldered the above into the PSU, I quickly re-assembled the thing and here's the results (photos taken just before I replaced the outer casing) :

    And finally, here you can see it installed as I wait for the system to bleed :

    Time for some tea and biccies! Well, I tentatively flicked the switch and as I cringed, waiting for a loud bang followed by fireworks, my machine quietly booted :D Wow, this things so goddamn quiet - I love it! There's now only the two panaflows at the front running and they're at 5v each so you can barely hear them. With the disks encased in foam, even when there's hard disk activity, my machine's still damn quiet!

  8. Why? by core+plexus · · Score: 3, Informative
    Ok, maybe because I live in the Arctic I don't get it. The only problem I ever had with a quality power supply was it got worn out. We do get some glacial silt and volcanic ash, both of which are very fine-grained and abrasive, but water cooling would not have helped that. My current power supply (Antec 450 something) has 3 fans, but they only use them when its needed. (I'm building a case with filtration system).

    People, this is not something to play around with. The disclaimers and warning on the site fall far short. It's one thing to cut yourself while monkeying around with a case mod; it's a whole 'nother country when you get a nasty zap, or worse.

    Computer virus zaps oil giant

  9. *ZAP* by suss · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first thing that came into mind when i saw "Water Cooled Power Supply", was "Darwin Award"...

    It'll probably end up there somewhere in the coming months, now that this has been on slashdot.

  10. Cool & quiet power supplies? by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Laptops usually have small and cool (no fans) power supplies. Why should desktops be much different? I understand desktop drives take a little more oomph, but then again you have more space for the PSU than a tiny laptop adapter, i.e. space for heat sinks.

    Makes me wonder if desktops still have huge transformers at 50Hz instead of the modern switching type. We do live in the 2000s, the space age once dreamed of, you know. I fancy getting a mini-itx system some day, but only if I could use a laptop style, totally quiet PSU. I mean, PSUs are supposed to convert energy, not dissipate it, or what?

    Then again, fans are not that bad compared to the sound from IBM hard drives...

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    1. Re:Cool & quiet power supplies? by atrus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Power supplies on the market these days are all of the switching type, not the linear type. Switching power supplies are more efficient, but you still have to regulate voltage, and the components that do this are not 100% efficient (the more current you draw through them, the hotter they'll get). You could in theory build a suitable switching power supply with no fans, but have you opened a modern power supply? They are very cramped, not leaving much room to apply liberal heatsinks to the components that need them (most everything active, like the switching transistors). The quick fix? Blow air through it and use smaller heatsinks.

  11. back to the future by HealYourChurchWebSit · · Score: 3, Insightful



    As I recall, back in the day, the early Cray Super Computers was water-cooled ... imagine, a system so proverbially "hot" that the install required the services of a plumber!

    --
    --- have you healed your church website?
  12. Mirror by xombo · · Score: 4, Informative

    CGI-limits reached, please try again later!

    That site needs a mirror, and I need karma, here is a mirror. Be nice to it :-)

  13. Dangerous. by Penguin2212 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Speaking from the perspective of an Electrical Engineering student, I must say this is totally insane. First of all, taking apart a power supply is bad enough if you're not careful. Second, pumping a conductive fluid through a high-voltage power converter is even more insane. Pumping water onto a processor to keep it cool is one thing, because currents and voltages on the motherboard are relatively low but a power supply has potentially lethal current and voltages. The article makes no mention of using a non-conductive fluid, nor does it make any mention of how to even correctly discharge capacitors while working with them. Anybody who tries this is seriously risking his or her life.

  14. Digital Fireworks Display, one way or another. by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well I guess a site called Digital Explosion is really the best suited to report this.

    Yeah, I have a couple of problems with the way this was carried out. Conceptually, I would love a completely water-cooled computer since I'm tired of the noise. But this is pretty dangerous.

    Why remove the existing heat sinks? Rather than removing them from components and risking forgetting a mica insulator or doing other damage, why not simply take advantage of them as an easy surface to which to attach cooling tubes. Most power supplies I've opened, I could solder copper tubing to the heatsinks fairly easily.

    The other thing is that the mass of the heatsinks would provide a little thermal inertia to buy you some time in the event of a bubble or other failure.

    I've also got concerns about the overall safety of this. Even without mica insulators or any other outward signs, a heatsink may be running at some potential other than ground. Pure water isn't very conductive, but all the same, your cooling water is likely to be grounded - and should be grounded. Pumping water through a tube attached to a component or heatsink will bring the water to that potential; using a piece of plastic tubing to insulate one metal tube from another is NOT safe.

    What you need to do is have electrically insulating but thermally conductive means to couple the heat to the tubing. Mica insulators and thermal transfer grease are a good start.

    I think I'd solder some copper tubing to some copper sheetmetal, and then I'd coat the flat surface with heat transfer grease, add a sheet of mica and more transfer grease, and then screw it to a heatsink inside the power supply. I'd use off-the-shelf electronics hardware to screw the two pieces together but maintain their electrical isolation: even Radio Shack sells the stuff.

    Make sure that the water is grounded, and then run the power supply from a Ground-Fault Interruptor (GFI) receptacle like you'd find in a bathroom. This way, a water leak in the power supply should turn off the power at the outlet and reduce the risk of a bigger problem.

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
    1. Re:Digital Fireworks Display, one way or another. by JKR · · Score: 3, Interesting
      ...why not simply take advantage of them as an easy surface to which to attach cooling tubes. Most power supplies I've opened, I could solder copper tubing to the heatsinks fairly easily.

      Hmmm. Soldering copper to aluminium is not immediately trivial - ordinary 60/40 lead/tin solder won't wet aluminium, you need special (silver-loaded?) solder which is much more expensive and uses pretty nasty flux chemicals.

      Even then, you'll have increased the thermal resistance of the joint significantly. I'd be tempted to try a solid block of copper with a hole drilled lengthwise and copper tubing soldered (actually I'd braze it - much stronger)to the outside faces. Then use mica washers / thermal paste as usual.

      ...then run the power supply from a Ground-Fault Interruptor (GFI) receptacle like you'd find in a bathroom.

      Be aware that domestic GFI plugs (also known as earth leakage or RCD trips) often don't trip until the current difference is ~ 30mA; typical tap water has a resistivity in the range 1 - 10 kOhm.cm, so at 120V, a few cm of insulated piping might stop the breaker tripping.

      Jon.

  15. The reason that power supplies have fans... by DeComposer · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...is because all of the discrete components need cooling, not just the ones that have heat sinks. It might be as much as a year before he smells the delicate aroma of cooked dielectric when a capacitor overheats and explodes.

    --


    Karma
  16. Liquid Mercury Cooling Systems by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not too sure liquid sodium is the best choice to cool your computer, since sodium melts at 208 degrees F (98 C). Besides, when you first boot up the computer, you'd have to have special heaters installed just to melt the sodium and get it moving! But, you know, in the end, I know you were being facetious. Nice job.

    I want to run mercury through my cooling system. I've got a couple of pounds of it, and it would certainly absorb heat more readily than water.

    But just one drop of mercury inside your computer and it's finished.

    Maybe could use gallium with small heaters?

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
    1. Re:Liquid Mercury Cooling Systems by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm glad you indicate your own realization that mercury is a dangerous choice for cooling system, or I'd say you've been drinking all that mercury you say you own.

      Drinking it? No. I've probably breathed a little more vapor over the years than would be considered healthy.

      Note the origins of the term "mad as a hatter" are from the days when hat-makers would use mercury to help shape the felt; the long-term exposure had interesting effects on rational thought and normal behavior.

      Note also that I once put a Chevette engine onto a snowblower.

      Interestingly enough, back when fast breeder reactors were still being considered as viable nuclear power sources in the US, there were proposed designs involving mercury cooling. Talk about unpolitical.

      But I'm sure it would be an effective cooling system.

      --
      Fire and Meat. Yummy.
    2. Re:Liquid Mercury Cooling Systems by Idarubicin · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Actually... they lined their hats with lead, not mercury. But I'm sure it would have had the same effect.

      The felt used in Victorian-era hats was treated with mercury salts to make it easier with which to work. Whether this is the actual origin of the phrase "mad as a hatter" is debated, but it was definitely mercury compounds that caused hatters' neurological problems.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    3. Re:Liquid Mercury Cooling Systems by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actualy my thermo book in the part on steam turbines has a bit on a power plant, I belive in NH, (don't feel like looking up) that had a steam power plant that used mercury for the loop. Not sure is it was a mix of mercury and water though. Had to be rough on the turbine, and very bad if you sprung a leak. Also a cold day could suck, if you think freezing water pipes sucks, how bout this one.

  17. Full Mirror with Thumbnails by Xerithane · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://xerithane.nerdfarm.org/watercool_psu.html

    Or:
    Here

    --
    Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  18. Re:Be very carefull with this by cybergibbons · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok, I can't read the site because it is slashdotted, and yeah, you shouldn't trust these guys anyway, because of what they are doing.

    But nonetheless, your logic is shit. I know HV electricians, pipe workers, welders, heavy plant operators, who don't even know what the internet is, but spend their lives doing stuff more dangerous that you can comprehend.

    It constantly annoys me that geeks think that they know better than everyone else, just because they know the exact ins and outs of computers and networking. Yes, they are important... but there are far more important things in life.

  19. Re:Any Material Scientists out there? by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 3, Informative

    HFE-7100

    I'm not a material scientist, though

  20. A little feedback for you all... by JonTheG33K · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm the (crazy?) guy that wrote that article and I feel it's only fitting I answer some of your reservations :) First of all, the article included a disclaimer indicating the dangers of capacitors inside PSUs and hence the need for caution. That said, I've never opened a PSU and magaed to find any voltage left in them (carefully tested with a multimeter). The reason I used water is that it is the best combination of price vs performance. Admittedly if there was a leak, my machine would be in serious trouble. The way I've constructed the thing, it's no more likely than the fan dying to be honest! The PSU does actually still get a little air flow since my case has two 120mm fans at the front running at 5v. They're blowing across the radiator which cools all the stuff that's water-cooled. With regards to the worries about "live heatsinks" I've tested every PSU I've water-cooled and in each and every one, there hasn't been a single "live" heatsink. Hope that clear things up a bit for the more sceptical of you ;)

    1. Re:A little feedback for you all... by herrd0kt0r · · Score: 3, Interesting

      herr g33k here demonstrates the level of g33kness we should all aspire to.

      and i'm not insulting him. with a ton of up-and-coming geeks, it's nice to see a modicum of safety exhibited. in this case, he actually used a multimeter (!) to check the capacitors (!) to save himself from being fried while modding his computer (!).

      it's the same with cars: ricers deck out their cars with 32987543289 amps of tasty goodness, but fail to demonstrate any level of foundational knowledge. which isn't to say that there are 32987543288 geeks frying themselves out of every 32987543289 geeks.

      what i'm saying is that the pinnacle of geekdom lies in the studying everything. not just where you can go, but where you should have been.

      and thusly, you can prevent yourself from sizzling the tender slushy organ known as the brain.

      i think that this message should be drilled into the heads of all future nerds. i would sincerely hate to see future slashdot stories like:

      - GEEK FRIES SELF MODDING POWER SUPPLY or
      - DO NOT MOUTH PIPETTE BATTERY FLUID or
      - "I TRIED TO OVERCLOCK MY WALL OUTLET WITH MY TONGUE AND _LIVED_!"

      safety first. discharge static electricity before doing your work. test your circuits. and always, ALWAYS wear a cup.

  21. G3 iMac, G4 Cube by Phroggy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Take a look at the later-model G3 iMacs and the G4 Cube; they have no fans. The Cube uses an external power supply, not inside the case, and it radiates heat like any adapter brick. The iMac has the power supply inside, and as hot air rises out the top it draws cool air in the bottom.

    Obviously the iMac only works that way because it's also engineered not to produce very much heat; I wouldn't expect the same to be possible with your standard Athlon system. Even Apple's newer desktop systems don't run cool enough not to need fans. Still, it seems to me that some of the same concepts could be applied.

    One of the reasons for having a fan on the power supply is to act as a case fan as well - it draws warm air out of the rest of the system, and cools the power supply on the way out. It seems to me you wouldn't want to just remove the power supply fan, unless you had another way of cooling the rest of the system.

    Hmm, I was going somewhere with this. Oh well.

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;