Well there is a lot of things that can cause this in water cooling. In order of probability: dust in radiator, low water, corrosion or build up in loop/water blocks, pump going out.
I'm not familiar with these newer sealed units, but I hope they don't mix aluminum and copper. If they do I hope they have additives. Is there a flow meter anywhere on it to test? You can weigh the unit and compare it to other people's and see if it has lost fluid, is there no way to add any?
Oh for sure. The only way to really stop evap is to use copper rigid tubing. Even a nonvisible puncture or porous area would allow the fluid to evaporate. Is your pump louder than it use to be?
The ambient temp is close to the same. I did move, but its not like it went from inside to outside. It is a couple of feet away from the HVAC intake vent?
They're sealed, but can/do still suffer from mild evap. They use a low permeable tubing, but with any liquid cooling solution, evap can happen.
Oh for sure. The only way to really stop evap is to use copper rigid tubing. Even a nonvisible puncture or porous area would allow the fluid to evaporate. Is your pump louder than it use to be?
For some reason my CPU core temps have gone up higher than they normally are. Before the PC kept temps under 45*C, and no issues. Now I am at 66*C with a normal load (no games, just web browser, and streaming radio). All of the fans are working, and recently clean the PC out. It has "Filters" so it is really easy. I believe the temp is the issue Im having while playing WOW where the FPS drops suddenly, and come back up. The GPU temp is fine around 36-50*C
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