physicist help me :)

kamo

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May 3, 2002
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How many watts can watercooling, without water pump, cool? What's the formula? For example there is one water pipe with diameter 5cm and height 50cm, the upper side is always 30 degrees and we want the bottom side to be 90 degrees, heated by X watts. It was very simple, help me

:wink: <font color=green> The second time is always better than the first :wink: </font color=green>
 
This is an interesting document, read it!
<A HREF="http://www.shirazu.ac.ir/schools/eng/chem-dept/courses/heat/tutorial.htm" target="_new">http://www.shirazu.ac.ir/schools/eng/chem-dept/courses/heat/tutorial.htm</A>

I see, that the problem is not easy at all, bye

:wink: <font color=green> The second time is always better than the first :wink: </font color=green>
 
Cool, I can use that info for my graduationproject about thermoelectric (cooling).

My PC eats so much money that I'm in 'desperate' need of it to buy PC3500 RAM, help Svol with his OC project!
--- PM me for information.
 
Let me tell you a little story about a very old car. The Ford Model T had NO water pump! It flowed water by convection, which is way the radiators back then had the water tanks on top and bottom instead of the sides, like current radiators. You could try a similar settup, but remember that the bottom of the radiator should be near level with the bottom of the water block.

<font color=blue>You're posting in a forum with class. It may be third class, but it's still class!</font color=blue>