Build a Kick-Ass Liquid Cooling System—6 Simple Steps
Install an All-in-One Water-Cooling Kit
As you can see, although water cooling provides exceptional cooling power, it isn’t the easiest—or cheapest—way to cool your PC. If you just want to cool your CPU more effectively and quietly than a performance air cooler but without the hassle of building a custom water-cooling rig, there’s an alternative: a prebuilt, closed-loop system like the Corsair Cooling Hydro Series H50 or the CoolIT ECO.
These systems achieve cooling performance near that of a custom water-cooling rig, but save you the hassle of building one yourself, or ever having to replace the fluid. They cost more than an air cooler, but significantly less than building your own water-cooling system. And, unlike full-blown water coolers, they’re easy to install and don’t take up much room in your case.
Installation for this type of cooler is simple. It’s a backplate-mounted water block for the CPU, connected to a small, one-fan radiator. You just attach the radiator and fan to an exhaust grate on your case, and that’s it; the pump and reservoir are built into the radiator.
You won’t get quite the same CPU cooling as in an all-out water-cooling system—or the nerd cred that comes from a tower full of tubes—but closed-loop coolers are definitely an excellent alternative for enthusiasts who want some extra cooling performance without a lot of hassle.
How to Monitor Your PC's Temperature
Whether you overclock, or just want to make sure your processor lasts as long as possible, it’s important to keep an eye on your system’s temperatures. These two free programs help you do just that.
Speed Fan
SpeedFan uses the built-in temperature-monitoring hardware in your chips to display temperatures for all of your individual components, and it allows you to control fan speeds in your case automatically, based on temperature readings. SpeedFan also monitors S.M.A.R.T. readings and analysis, so you can make sure your hard drives are healthy. (www.almico.com/speedfan.php)
HWMonitor
From CPUID, the makers of CPUZ, HWMonitor keeps track of all the temperatures and voltages in your system. It doesn’t have the advanced S.M.A.R.T. features or fan-speed controls of SpeedFan, but its temperature-reporting functionality is top-notch. (www.cpuid.com/hwmonitor.php)