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Hardware Hacking

Aquarium Full of Oil For PC Cooling 597

JaredOfEuropa writes "Forget fancy watercooled CPUs or complicated heat pipes. Annoyed with the noise of the forced-air cooling in his computer, this guy simply dumped his entire motherboard in an aquarium filled with mineral oil. (coral cache). No modifications were necessary; he even left the fans running to keep the oil moving about. The only thing not submersed in oil is the hard disk."
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Aquarium Full of Oil For PC Cooling

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:31PM (#12502833)
    So if this thing overheats, does it deep fry itself?
  • by Chicane-UK ( 455253 ) * <chicane-ukNO@SPAMntlworld.com> on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:32PM (#12502844) Homepage
    he only thing not submersed in oil is the hard disk.

    And what about the CDROM drive eh, eh?! :)
    • the only thing not submersed in oil is the hard disk.

      Ironic.
  • Damn! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:32PM (#12502847)
    Mineral oil?!? I'll bet all his fish are dead!
  • Reported previously (Score:5, Informative)

    by ThePlague ( 30616 ) * on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:33PM (#12502856)
    This has been done before, as reported by slashdot almost six years ago [slashdot.org]. Of course, the guy in the '99 story used a styrofoam cooler, while the newer one upgraded to an aquarium, so I guess progress marches on!
    • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @05:10PM (#12503335) Homepage
      This has been done before, as reported by slashdot almost six years ago [slashdot.org].

      well, given the regularity of dupes around here, I'll go out on a limb and say as dupes go, this one is at least new to most of us.
    • by Easy2RememberNick ( 179395 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @06:03PM (#12503852)
      Give the guy a break he just got back from the Time Travellers Convention! It was him six years ago ;)
    • Long-haul Effects? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Devil ( 16134 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @06:26PM (#12504063) Homepage
      As this is really a re-hash of an old story, I'd be more interested in what happens to these rigs over the long haul. How long does the computer last in oil? How often does he have to change the oil? How does he cool the oil? How long before the mobo and cards are somehow affected by the oil?

      Answering *these* questions would make for a much more interesting article than just "Hey, dude, I put my mobo in oil! I'm l33t!"
    • by artemis67 ( 93453 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @07:30PM (#12504543)
      is that every last connection has to be SOLDERED DOWN in order for this thing to work for more than half an hour.

      The problem the guy ran into six years ago was that the mineral oil seeped in between all of the connections and disrupted the flow of electrons; PCI cards, AGP card, CPU, IDE, power... everything. A stock motherboard simply won't cut it, you have to have a custom board with everything hard-wired to it to survive the submersion.

      This story is a dupe because it doesn't solve the basic problem.
  • messy... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by sznupi ( 719324 )
    I'll keep the convenience of clean messing inside my current, completely quiet, oil-free PC, anyday.
  • by Boolio ( 665658 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:33PM (#12502862)
    New Headline: Slashdot effect causes need to change the oil........
  • Slick! (Score:4, Funny)

    by MisanthropicProgram ( 763655 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:34PM (#12502865)
    'Nuff Said
  • by winkydink ( 650484 ) * <sv.dude@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:34PM (#12502868) Homepage Journal
    Mineral Oil is not nice stuff [jtbaker.com]

    Did you see the parts about flammable and a respiratory hazard?

    What's next? A guy who uses gasoline for liquid cooling?

    May I recommend Fluorinert FC-70 [mmm.com]?
  • by Blymie ( 231220 ) *
    I don't see any fans or other way the heat is dissipated into the air, from the oil.

    I guess he uses it for an hour, then the oil becomes the same temp as the cpu.. and then shuts it off? Since he says that the forum isn't in english, I didn't bother to check.

    However, nothing is visible in his pics...

    I'd say that the only reason this hasn't gone *boom*, is because it looks like a PII or Celeron (Slot 1 card).. and he hasn't really pushed it for long periods of time.

    • by Space Coyote ( 413320 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:41PM (#12502972) Homepage
      I don't see any fans or other way the heat is dissipated into the air, from the oil.

      Except that the fans are still on, which supposedly moves the oil around. And when oil at the surface becomes warmer than room temperature, the heat is disappated into the air, with much greater surface area than is touching the heat source.

    • "I guess he uses it for an hour, then the oil becomes the same temp as the cpu.. and then shuts it off? Since he says that the forum isn't in english, I didn't bother to check."

      Apparently it's been running for a year or so to date... (supposedly)

      e.
    • As the oil moves around, it contacts the air outside the tank. The air takes the heat away. Think of the oil as one giant heatsink.
      • Sorry guys, I don't buy it. I've heated fish tanks larger than that, with a small heater (you know the little fish tank kind).

        The ram, the CPU, the power supply.. they put out a LOT of heat, especially when taxed. As well, this oil is more dense than water. It will take longer to heat up, but it will also _retain_ heat longer as well. Water gets a lot of its cooling because of evaporation, which won't be happening to this oil..

        Again, I don't buy it. I've seen others use external cooling methods for t
        • by dougmc ( 70836 ) <dougmc+slashdot@frenzied.us> on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @05:26PM (#12503511) Homepage
          I've heated fish tanks larger than that, with a small heater (you know the little fish tank kind).
          So we all have.

          However, This site [about.com] suggests a 75 watt heater to keep a 20 gallon tank 18 degrees F above room temperature, or a 150 watt heater for 36 degrees F.

          The computer probably puts out less than 150 watts total. Even assuming an 80 degree F room, that would put the computer at 116 degrees F, which wouldn't upset the computer at all. Granted, the heater you put in a fish tank has a thermostat, and so it's not on all the time, but your computer will not have any problems at 116 degrees F inside, and could go a good deal higher safely.

          But I do agree with the other guy to respond to your post -- I don't see the fans even turning, let alone turning enough to move the oil around. Perhaps if they were cut down some ...

          Of course, I have no idea how well heat flows through oil, or how well it's transferred from oil to the air. But I imagine that the heat generated is low enough for it to not be a problem.

    • by csimicah ( 592121 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:45PM (#12503023)
      Even with no heat loss to the air, I've got 10 minutes per degree C raise, at 20 gallons of mineral oil and 200 watts of power.

      It's probably moot because that's a ton of cooling surface area.
    • by endoboy ( 560088 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:49PM (#12503076)
      don't give up your day job for a career in heat transfer...

      A large surface area (e.g., the sides and top of the acquarium) makes an efficient device for convective heat transfer to the room air. The mineral oil would certainly get warmer than the room air, but it would stay well below the temp of the PC components.

      Given sufficient motivation, the steady state value can be calculated within a fraction of a degree. Lacking that motivation, however, a reasonable approximation is that the acquarium would be less than 10C above room temp.
  • What's next -

    - PC kept lifted to tropopause to take advantage of constant -55C temperatures

    - Armies of hamsters enslaved to turn multi-stage centrifugal fans

    - PC strapped onto hood of 67 Camaro driven down freeway to maximize airflow

  • it's regular old cooking oil!

  • Glycerin (Score:4, Interesting)

    by IPFreely ( 47576 ) <mark@mwiley.org> on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:37PM (#12502913) Homepage Journal
    I saw a few years ago (probably here on /.) where someone put a MB into a tank filled with glycerin, then put an air conditioner cooler grid into the tank with it. A pump curculated the glycerin over the cooling grid and around the MB. I thought that was pretty extreme. I guess the main point is that you don't want something corrosive or conductive, and you do want something with a sufficiently high specific heat to take the heat away without cooking the board.
  • by the_rajah ( 749499 ) * on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:38PM (#12502927) Homepage
    I'm an elevator Engineer. This reminds me of a very old residential elevator controller I saw recently that was installed in 1917 and still had all the original equipment in good working order. The controller was in a cast iron tub with all the relays mounted to the lid and suspended in transformer oil. There was a hoist in the ceiling to enable lifting the lid for access to the relays. It would cost a fortune to build something like that today, but it certainly was durable.
    • by Zordak ( 123132 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @05:04PM (#12503286) Homepage Journal
      At my former job, we had a subcontractor designing an energy storage system. It had to deliver a huge amount of current, so they had this flywheel that would have to charge for a while and then it could do its job. Along the way, I had to approve their coolant with some fancy ultra-high-tech-sounding name. This included the worst-case scenario of the flywheel coming apart and the coolant getting all over expensive and critical equipment as well as acting as a soil contaminant. I got the data sheet and the stuff was basically corn syrup (of a non-sticky type). Turns out it works great.
  • I wish I'd thought of that! Tired of the stupid computer that makes so much damn noise? Dump it in the fish tank full of mineral oil! (we won't go into why the fish tank was full of mineral oil). Well, hell, we've been drinking... I wonder if it still works... Whoa, it does work! Neat - take some pictures!

    I must not drink enough when I'm near a fishtank of mineral oil...

    --LWM
  • At least I'm assuming it is. How many times has this subject come up?

    Maybe we should hold competitions to see who can make the best mineral oil cooled machine?

    I'm tempted to make a dry-ice cooled block (dehumidified of course and allowing for temperature gradients...)
  • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • To quote Fark (Score:3, Interesting)

    by PIPBoy3000 ( 619296 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:39PM (#12502944)
    This thread is useless without pics!

    There's not even a Google cache of the site. Oopsie.

    For the curious, here's someone else [s3help.com] who had a similar idea.
  • Perhaps he should have used this on his webserver BEFORE posting to /.?
  • I don't see anything that he has done to cool the oil it would seem that he has decreased his surface area for air cooling, It just seems to work off the thermal mass of the oil.
    This would work great until the oil reached a temperature similar to the max temp for the CPU.
    Now if he added a little fountain or a bubbler, or something, that would increase the surface area and thus increase the cooling.
    Now if he added little neon lights, some racing stripes, and some anime stickers, we could get some of the les
  • -> Softens hands every time you add/move components
    -> Useful as a laxative (though this guy probably won't need this when he sees the bill from his provider)
    -> Lubricant (what nerd doesn't need that)
    -> Good for soothing baby's chapped bottom
  • A few notes... (Score:5, Informative)

    by AuSerpent ( 5434 ) * on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:43PM (#12503009)
    The guy uses vegetable oil not mineral oil according to his site.

    I did this for a year or so using mineral oil, a plastic storage tub and a small dorm-sized fridge. I had a small electric pump that pumped mineral oil into tubing which was coiled inside the fridge (drilled and in and out hole on the side) and then back into the resevoir. I was a little worried about condensation but it ran fine for over a year before I got tired of the clutter and mess of it. I could have done it better but I didn't want to spend any money on it and just use what I had laying around.

    It was mostly for fun with a few interesting things I learned from it:

    * It allowed me to overclock about 30% more than I could previously squeeze out.
    * The mineral oil did not harm the hardware at all that I can tell from a year of being submerged(it just was a pain to clean).
    * If you have your resevoir higher than your mouse then your mouse will be full of oil in a few weeks (same goes for any component connected by wire I imagine).
    * The only component I found that could not be submerged was a hard drive.
    * The outside coating on the wires will harden and break away after being submerged long enough(but they will still work).
    * There was no connection issues with PCI cards or any peripheral device that was plugged in even if they were coated in mineral oil(even jumpers could be changed while it was submerged).
    * If a drop of some other liquid (that is lighter than the oil) accidently falls into the resevoir it will quickly be coated by the mineral oil and slowly fall to the bottom and can be sucked out (phew!)

    Probably more but those were the most interesting things I remember of it.
    • Re:A few notes... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sremick ( 91371 )
      The outside coating on the wires will harden and break away after being submerged long enough

      Well I'd say that just about nixes it right there. The oil might not conduct, but the insulation in those wire bundles is to keep the wires from touching each other, not just other things. Once the insulation crumbles away and the wires start to short against each other, you're going to have problems. Especially in the power supply.
      • He doesn't mean the insulation. Mineral oil won't eat through that (usually). He means the wrapping of the cables. Inside that, the conductors are indevidually insulated with an oil-resistant material (pvc, often). Transformer coils are insulated with a different kind of oil resistant plastic, and are often submerged in oil.
    • "The guy uses vegetable oil not mineral oil according to his site."

      Should have used extra virgin olive oil. Added lots of anchovies, some garlic and half a pound of butter.

      mmmmmmm bana cauda....

      Mr. Garibaldi would be proud.
    • If a drop of some other liquid (that is lighter than the oil) accidently falls into the resevoir it will quickly be coated by the mineral oil and slowly fall to the bottom and can be sucked out (phew!)

      I'm tryin' to figure out why a drop of anything ligher than mineral oil would sink to the bottom instead of floating on the top.

  • PC lava lamp (Score:3, Interesting)

    by enrico_suave ( 179651 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @04:56PM (#12503183) Homepage
    he should make that sucker into a lava lamp [oozinggoo.com]

    it would show/highlight the oil currents/flow by the fans (that are still turning, BTW)

    whoah
  • by DaveM753 ( 844913 ) on Wednesday May 11, 2005 @06:01PM (#12503830)
    Stickiest dust bunnies EVER.

Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel

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