An elegant, cool and quiet design. 17db fans, ultra low temps.
The team group ddr4 3200mhz cas14 Samsung die memory has a new heat spreaders from EKWB to match the shiny nickel build. Note this ram is absolute ideal for the 9900k imo. If you are trying to get high FPS.
A shot of my desktop with main audio amp, dac and headphones. Plus a hitman figure that shows my love for the game. preferable to new Hitman games however... not as much Absolution, which is where this figurine is from.
A shot of my desktop with more bare audio setup,
A shot of my desktop with more bare audio setup,
There is a special 4fitting piece that attaches to this drain hole before turning the twist valve behind it. Allowing for extremely easy fluid changes.
good side profile with the glass Filling is from the fill hole that is located under the top panel. Using polished nickel fittings and plugs.
the drain hole is underneath the front panel and towards the very bottom of the case, also with drain plug and backup internal twist lock flow fitting to prevent possible leaks. This is complex design with many quality fittings.
Quality photos will be posted soon. This is a sneak of the finished product.
Matches the laptop (aka dust collector) and yes its a new 2018 quad core loaded up macbook pro. anthracite or space grey. The phanteks evolv x case is so very close! for those who care.
Under the desk was tricky. Lots of custom brackets to hold items like external hard drives, UPS battery backup, Isolation transformer for audio gear, USB 3.1C hub, linear psu's etc etc. it's nice and tidy....except the crappy NAS on the floor which is temporary and used to offload some files. This NAS is 11tb of data.
This is a good shot to show the insides and see it's pure red copper chrome plated pipes and beautiful water cooled blocks, nickel or chrome, white, black and lit with uV is the theme. Filling is from the fill hole that is located under the top panel. Using polished nickel fittings and plugs.
the drain hole is underneath the front panel and towards the very bottom of the case, also with drain plug and backup internal twist lock flow fitting to prevent possible leaks. This is complex design with many quality fittings.
Some attempt to capture the lighting from this pc.
This is half of the the Teamgroup DDR4 3200mhz Cas14 ram. Total of 4x8gb or 32gb ram. This is absolutely the lowest latency ram I could find.
Before tearing down the Asus DUAL RTX2080ti cooler. This must go to replace with an EKWB nickle/plexi waterblock and nickel polished backing plate.
It does have micron ram unfortunately, however i'm lucky this one has not had issues. Samsung Die's would be preferable.
Sneak peek at the Cablemod pro cables with aluminum combs! so nice!
The case was packed soooo well!
Chrome plated red copper pipes.... I've always wanted to do this build! It's more pricey, but glorious if you have the patience for it!
Near Finished, a few connections to go.
Just had to move the beast to the garage for the filling process. Plan for the worst and hope for the best!
checking connections before filling... filling with Mayhems Dragon Nano Fluid... was bought out from the original company. I've been using the Dragon Nano Fluid since it came out and have never had any better fluids!
Just had to move the beast to the garage for the filling process. Plan for the worst and hope for the best! Notice all the precurved chrome plated red copper piping. These really look sharp. Be sure to get your measurements with 1mm accuracy or better. These are tricky , but a quality pipe cutter made it easier.... I ended up using a Milwaukee brand small pipe cutting tool.
First fill is 99.9% perfect except a tiny drop or leak came from the very top fitting that was connected to the filling hole fitting. Figures...but this was a quick fix. The system ran for 72 hours with external power as shown. I'm using a 12v molex psu.
Perfect, no leaks!
Perfect, no leaks!
Kitsuné (Fox) build - Chromed Red Copper tubing
My name is Tim and I've been building computers since I was eleven years old and now approaching 38 years old! To some of you that makes me an old fart. I love how computers have evolved over the years and now they have become a passionate hobby and are more expressive of our personalities. Sure, it was a passionate hobby for me when I was young, but it certainly wasn't cool or “rad” at the time. I was a complete nerd and most of my friends did not have computers or have any interest in them. As innovation has improved, pc components are now fit and finished and appearing beautiful even. My old machines were beige towers and didn’t even need heat sinks for many components like CPU’s.
I still remember my biggest mistake ever while building a computer. I was about 11-12years old and assembling a 486 dx 50 which at the time was a beast! All other CPU's had a front side bus speed of 25mhz or 33mhz yet this machine actually had a FSB of a blazing 50mhz! My Father and I were building the machine, which btw was meant to be for him. I was carelessly installing the CPU into the motherboard and didn’t take note of the orientation of the chip and its corner which is marked. And no, they are not keyed to prevent installation with incorrect orientation.... so when it came to turning the power in to the board/CPU it had a peculiar looking red dot in the center of the CPU and I thought to myself, “wow, that’s neat, a little orangish red light on the chip!”. My childlike mind decides to immediately touch this little orange colored light and good lord I was in for a surprise! That was cherry red hot ceramic where a pin of the CPU was literally burning a hole through the motherboard socket! Mind you, this happened all within 10sec of powering on this system for the first time. My fingertip was wiped of its identity by a horrible burn and a funny smell of flesh and burning plastic. This my friends are my most embarrassing moment when building a computer. Thankfully Since I was just a child I can laugh at this easily. I’m so glad that today’s machines practically fall into place with keyed components and connectors that cannot be mistaken. For those who are a vintage fart like I am, they know that older machines really didn’t have these fail-safe designs. Enough of my past, let’s talk about my most current build. Which to some they may find it a bit insane that it has about 40+ fittings into this build for a very expensive yet cool looking result of hard-line tubes and fittings everywhere. There is even a drain tube type fitting that is made up of four fittings that attaches to the lower drainage port. It’s extremely easy to fill and drain this system since I spent a bit more time planning it all out.
For those who have done full-blown water cooled rigs and the even less likely few who have experience with doing solid tube builds with copper piping like that found in my shared build. For those who know, it’s a big undertaking to do builds like this. I have over 80+ hours into this build and lost count of the exact amount of time. So many little things they go overlooked that require so much time to complete. It may be hard to see why it would take so long. This is one of a whole ton of builds I've done in my lifetime. But I think I can say this is my favorite! Realistically I’ve built several dozen custom build's for myself and usually my "epic" build's last for a long time since I rarely spare any expense and go with the best components available.
I chose to go with solid red copper tubing with chrome plating... and was a bit worried about leaks so went overboard and went with a new design of fitting... solid brass and nickel quad gasket fittings to ensure no chance of leaks. In some places, the seals were upgraded to monsoon silicone gaskets for a more snug fit.
Some of the copper tubes come pre-bent 90 degrees for ease of making a nice clean look. Obviously, you can’t bend chrome plated tubes without them cracking.... so very careful planning is required. Of course, a good pipe cutter like the Milwaukee brand pipe cutter really does work well and assists in clean cuts and no scratches. Funny, as I tried 4 different pipe cutters before finding one I found to do a pretty good job.
I can't stress enough how important it is to get measurements within 1mm accurate. Metal pipes don't flex at all if compared to soft tubing or even PETG hard tubing. Plus the metal tubing is sharp once it's been cut...it takes patience to properly remove any burrs and essentially smooth each of the edges to a nice clean finish. A foam sandpaper square was used and a Dremel for some specific modifications. This helps the assembly process and prevents damaging any o ring seals. It’s worth it!!! Don’t you think?
Obviously, my inspiration was from the Verge's PC building video and was sure to use enough thermal paste and a little extra just to be sure! I couldn’t forget using my Livestrong bracelet and a good pair of tweezers (sarcasm). This video will never die! haha. Sorry, I had to mention it... maybe one of the greatest YouTube videos last year.
Seriously though, This build is the most ambitious and involved project I've done while working with water-cooled PC arts. This build is based around the clean and sleek looking Phanteks Evolv X case. Why? you might ask, well I do like the anthracite grey anodized finish and the dual tempered glass panels... But mainly I found this to be one of the most compact-size of cases that would fit the hardware I had in mind. If you look carefully you'll notice how many water-cooled bits I've managed to fit in a moderately sized case. There is no wasted space with pointless drive bays for hard drives, disk drives or cd drives. I can't remember the last time I used a Compact disc. Even the last few builds I’ve done I included a Blu-ray DVD burner whatever and never used it once. So this time would be different. As far as the water cooling, it was very difficult to fit all the gear into this average sized case. Generally, it would take a large tower case for this much cooling... In fact, the larger reservoir and dual 360 EKWB radiators barely shoehorned their way into this rather small case. I wanted EPIC performance with no compromises. The important factors for me are the following:
1. Must be excellent at FPS at high resolutions like 4K(chose the i9-9900k as the heart) some believe 4K gaming is silly, but it’s doable with the pg27uq monitor, otherwise 60hz is no good.
2. Must be ideal for audio enthusiasts so must be very quiet overall(my audio gear setup is just as impressive as this machine) And must be able to process DSD1024 in HQPlayer with moderate filters.
3. Must be perfect for content creation and photography (sorry for some of the photography, as this project should have been captured with my A7R3, but instead was shot with an iPhoneX during assembly.
4. I'm a water-cooled lover however understand that the very best of water cooling comes at a price, and also requires a tremendous amount of patience and extra hours of labor to achieve results that are desired. This is where my OCD comes in and helps achieve a good end result that I'm fairly happy with. This build was started sometime around October 2018 and don’t recall exactly when it’s completed, technically it’s not done since I will be adding a second 2080ti soon, reroute some tubing and also get some slight revised Cablemod pro cables to perfect cable management in the backside which I’m fully aware of.
So for those who just want to know the specs... Here is a quick list/rundown of what this build includes.
1. Phanteks Evolv X - Anthracite Grey anodized finish
2. Intel i9-9900k - Overclocked @ 5.1ghz all 8 cores (it does a stable OC to 5.2ghz but I didn’t like the temps being higher)
3. Asus Formula XI Motherboard (EKWB water cooling is stock)
4. Teamgroup TeamDark DDR4 Cas14 3200mhz ram (32gb total or 4 sticks of 8gb) (this is the lowest latency ram I could find) - the heat spreaders were replaced with aesthetically appealing EKWB polished nickel heat spreaders. This matches the overall theme I'm going with.
5. Storage - Two of the 970evo NVME 1tb drives... One is for the OS (win10) and the other is for AAA title games. Then there are 3 860Evo 1tb's for general storage of media. External storage is one 850evo 1tb, one NAS that has 4 drives and a total of 11tb of storage, another 4tb WD enclosure, yet another 8tb Samsung drive, and lastly several portable drives from Samsung of 1tb and 500gb variants.
6. EKWB 360mm radiators (two of these), EKWB X-RES D5 250 RGB - this is the MAXIMUM size reservoir/pump combo to fit. In fact it required very careful planning and custom fittings to get properly mounted - EKWB CPU water block (Velocity Nickel RGB) - Lastly, the fans are a total of Seven Noiseblocker B12-2 120mm - 17db - 1300rpm fans. One exhaust on the back of the case and three for each of the radiators ("push" from the top and "pull" from the front) - this requires special spacers for the front, as well as special foam gaskets to optimize air flow. The reservoir had a custom bracket I made to properly fit this within the case. Planning the loop was tedious and overall this build was over 80+ hours to complete. Which includes planning the system from beginning to the very end. unlike most of my builds being from 3-8hours for water cooled systems. This was many steps beyond. - Lastly must mention thermal paste and pads, which all paste was Thermal Grizzly and the pads used for the video card and ram was Fujipoly Extreme XR-M. All pads were replaced anywhere possible, and paste used to improve thermals of the video card, CPU, motherboard etc.
7. Nvidia RTX2080ti 11gb (Asus dual was the base card I started with) added the EKWB Waterblock that is polished Nickel and clear acrylic and also has the optional polished Nickel backing plate. This was mounted in the vertical slot in the Phanteks case which is an optional kit that was purchased separately. I would have NEVER done this with an air-cooled 2080ti since they obviously get too hot.... however, water cooled is no issue and purely an aesthetic choice at this point.
8. Majority of all fittings are either Barrow quad sealed nickel plated finish for solid 14mm tubing, some Byski fittings, and some EKWB. The tubing is all Pure Red Copper with chrome plating from Barrow/Byski. I went overkill with fittings and well over 40% of the cost of this build was in the water cooling bits.
9. There are some RGB bits added from Phanteks that was added to tastefully add lighting. Usually, it's set to subtle lighting.
10. JCat Femto clock USB dedicated PCIe card for audio grade external gear like my Dac, Amp, and headphones which I can get into later.
11. The power supply many people may think I'm insane for choosing, yet I carefully chose the Corsair AX1600i PSU for the reason it has the lowest ripple noise of any PSU on the market, and this can help for audio related tasks. A second reason was that I knew the fan speed would NEVER be on, therefore the noise spec would be dead silent...even under full load. So this alone was the major reason I chose to go WAY overkill in this department.
12. Cablemods helped me get some of the very first ever made Pro series cables that have the new aluminum combs that were made for a single comb type dual 8pin PCI-E cable setup. I was fortunate to get these for my build. And Matt @ Cablemod was great to deal with and we talked a lot about custom builds and I expressed my urgency to have this dual PCI-E comb piece for my build. I think my color scheme of UV purple, chrome or polished nickel, anthracite grey/black is all very clean! These cables really help tie it all together! What do you all think?
13. Monitor I'm using is the Asus PG27UQ which is the first to have 4K 144hz, G-sync and HDR1000 all together. However you only can have HDR at 98hz really...this is OK for me. And I can't be happier with this monitor. It works very well for photography with perfect color and works very well for gaming with vivid beautiful smooth 4K graphics that are well above the typical 60hz panels that are common.
14. The mouse is the Swiftpoint 700 and runner up mice are the Roccat AIMO and Razer Basilisk
15. The keyboard is a Corsair Platinum K95 with a few custom keycaps I've added.
16. External Sound (headphone setup)- HoloAudio Kitsune Tuned Edition Spring2 DAC, HoloAudio Azure Amplifier, iFi Pro iCan Amplifier, Meze Audio Empyrean Headphones, Hifiman Susvara Headphones, Sony Z1R Headphones, Hifiman Arya Headphones, Audeze Mobius (for gaming), and Meze Audio Neo Classics. The audio setup is 4-5times the cost of the PC build, considering the Susvara’s alone are 6K.
17. External Sound (bookshelf speakers) - Vanatoo Transparent One speakers w/ Definitive Audio Supercube 2000 subwoofer - I highly recommend these bookshelf speakers with the ISO acoustics Aperta stands which improve imaging significantly. The subwoofer is overkill if you want some seriously insane sub bass and don’t have a lot of space. Just the speakers alone will product lower freq than other bookshelf speakers that are 3-4times its cost. I love these significantly more than the KEF LS50’s