What Are the Advantages of a Liquid-Cooled Computer?
Over the years, CPU (central processing unit) and graphics card speeds have increased. To generate the new speeds, CPUs employ more transistors, draw more power, run at higher clock rates, and thus generate more heat than ever before. Liquid cooling is more efficient than traditional heatsink technology at moving heat away from components. In turn, this technology allows processors to run at higher speeds by keeping the CPU and graphics cards running within the manufacturer’s temperature specifications. This efficiency is one reason extreme overclockers tend to favor this approach—in some cases, doubling processor speeds using very complex liquid-cooling setups. Another benefit of liquid cooling is quieter operation. Most current heatsink-and-fan combinations generate a lot of noise because their fans work hard at circulating large volumes of air. In fact, many high-performance CPUs require fan speeds in excess of 5000 rpm; overclocking a CPU requires even more airflow over the CPU. Liquid cooling reduces the “engine noise” this generates.
What Does a Liquid Cooling System Look Like?
A liquid cooling system has two parts:
The impeller, which is a fan immersed in liquid to circulate it through the system. The liquid helps muffle the noise it generates.A fan at the exterior of the case to pull air over the cooling tubes of the radiator.
Neither of these needs to run at very high speeds, so the system runs quietly.
What Are the Disadvantages?
As advantageous as liquid cooling systems are, they do have drawbacks.
They Need Space
Liquid cooling kits require a fair amount of space inside the computer case to work effectively. There must be room for items such as the impeller, fluid reservoir, tubing, fan, and power supplies. For that reason, liquid-cooled systems require larger desktop system cases. Much of the system can be outside of the case, but that takes up space in or around the desktop. Recent closed-loop technologies have reduced the overall footprint over older systems, but they still require space. Specifically, they need enough clearance for the radiator to replace one of the internal case fans. Also, the tubes must reach from the component that needs to be cooled to the radiator. Finally, a closed-loop system cools only a single component, so if you want to liquid-cool a CPU and a video card, you need space for two systems.
Installation Requires Expertise
A custom-built liquid cooling application requires a significant level of technical knowledge to install. Although you can buy a kit from a cooling manufacturer, you still must install it. Every case has a different layout, so you must cut and route the tubes precisely to fit your case. If you don’t get all this right, you could damage your system.
What Are the Alternatives?
Recently introduced closed-loop liquid cooling systems require no maintenance and are easy to install. They might not offer the performance of a custom-built system with larger liquid reserves and radiators, but there’s almost no risk. Closed-loop systems still offer some performance benefits over air-cooled CPU heatsinks, though, including larger horizontal tower heatsinks and less space requirements.
Is There a Liquid-Cooled System in Your Future?
Air cooling is still the most common form of cooling because of the ease and cost of implementing them. However, as systems continue to shrink and demands for high-performance systems increase, liquid-cooling solutions are going to become more common in desktop computer systems. Some companies are looking into the possibility of using liquid-cooling options for some high-performance laptop computer systems. As of now, though, liquid cooling is found only in the most extreme of performance systems that are custom-built by users and high-end techs.