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GeForce GTX 285 On Water Cooling
GeForce GTX 285 On Water Cooling: Zotac's Infinity Edition : Why Water?
Why Water?
Liquid cooling takes advantage of the key features that a larger radiator offers compared to local sinks, with the added benefit that the radiator can often be mounted in a cooler air stream.
That explains why a large radiator sits at the front of most automobiles, but in the case of overclocking, complexity and inconvenience have limited the number of liquid-cooling applications in PCs. Most liquid cooling systems focus on the CPU, since adding other components to the loop makes servicing a nightmare. In particular, removing a liquid cooling system from graphics cards requires extreme caution and plenty of extra time to drain the system, which must then be refilled and re-purged (to remove air from the water lines) before it can be used again. This could easily turn five minutes of diagnostic work into a one-hour ordeal--and that's if you know what you're doing.
Who wants to drain/re-fill this bad-boy?
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GeForce GTX 285 On Water Cooling: Zotac's Infinity Edition : Why Water? - Review Tom's Hardware