Superbowl Bump! Dell has outlet sale right now. Double down on discounts! Have been told that Dell rep says up to do eGift cards can be used on a single order over the phone (can't guarantee that though).
2 x $75 eGift (expires 04/27/16)
SOLD
2 x $100 eGift (expires 04/21/2016)
SOLD
Prices are very flexible. Will only send via certified mail (free shipping!) to regular members. Willing to email codes as well, but only to established members with high heatware.
Heatware/eBay: javRocket...
This sucks!!!!!
I bought the game from D2D. It took 3 effin days on my crappy DSL connection to download. It seemed like it installed fine. Then I try running. First gives me the crap about running it in administrator mode (though I am administrator). Fixed that by changing the properties of...
Technology is similar to external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and intensity modulated radiation. I guess the difference is that the underlying technology is MR instead of CT like the ones I mentioned.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_beam_radiotherapy
Actually according to Slickdeals each episode of the BBC UK version has about 10min more footage than the Discovery US version. Also the BBC UK has an extra episode.
I'm surprised your computer didn't turn off when the CPU reached 109C? Also did you have your pump attached to the CPU port so that if the rpms dropped a certain level the motherboard would shut off everything?
+1 Yea I agree. This seems like one of those rare special situations that require you to try it out on your own and see what happens. Are you using any type of anti-corrosive agent? I think the thermaltake radiator is Al while everything seems to be copper.
I wouldn't say "significantly." The flow difference between 3/8" and 1/2" is actually quite small. Nevertheless, having a 3/8" barb makes the loop essentially a 3/8" loop regardless of how many 1/2" components you have. Its better to be consistent with the barb sizes mainly because its easier to...
D-tek makes various full-cover heatsinks (you still need the waterblock) for a number of video cards.
e.g. D-tek 260/280 GTX
http://www.petrastechshop.com/dgfx2unnv200.html
Larger tubes offer greater flow (i.e. fluid moving faster through components) and better cooling. In addition smaller tubing is more restrictive. A consequence of larger tubes is that they are harder to bend (thus more kinking). I think the most commonly used tubing is Masterkleer 7/16" tubing...