Full-tower sized cases should be able to. Obviously, you'll have to have a reservoir that slots into a CD Drive bay, and a relatively small pump.
If, however, only the cooling blocks are inside your case, the pump and reservoir can be bigger than normal. You could even put the reservoir and/or radiator into a mini-fridge.
If, however, only the cooling blocks are inside your case, the pump and reservoir can be bigger than normal. You could even put the reservoir and/or radiator into a mini-fridge.
thats just imbasilic..... you either have a standard internal water-cooling system, an external system, or a water-chiller, that is usually externally mounted, and involves lots of insulation on the pipes..
Shoving it into a fridge is a F***ING STUPID IDEA ..... firstly, the door would either always have to be open, or you would have to drill holes in the side of your case... also, the air in the fridge isn't cool enough to cool the water during the little time its spent in there.......
....stick to internal or external, but not fridge. :
well the case i want is the thermaltake tsunami dream series i believe and the water-cooling i want is the thermaltake bigwater 735. also if i get the thermaltake bigwater 735 will it fit one a AMD AM2 Athlon 64x2 Dual Core 4600+
Nope. A liquid-cooling kit contains everything you need for your first set-up. You can learn from it, and when you can afford it, build you're own that far surpasses it in performance.
i jst saw the thermaltake armor 25cm side fan edition. would that case be even better for liquid cooling ? also does anyone noe how much the thermaltake armor 25cm side fan edition would cost in AUD i tried to look for it in http://www.staticice.com.au/ but all i could find is the normal thermaltake armor
Well, both cases are exactly the same, except one has a 25cm fan in the side panel. If you're only liquid-cooling the CPU, then this will help keep your GPU cool. If you're liquid-cooling both, there's little point.