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View Full Version : rad barbs at top or bottom ?


jackal2513
11-26-03, 03:49 PM
apologies for posting this twice .. picked teh wrong forum first time round by mistake:




I am mounting a BIX2 inside my case

I can have the barbs at teh top whch would mean slightly longer length of turbing to and from the rad but potentially less problems with trapped air (although i am easily able to remove the rad from its fixings and tilt it up and down to remove any trapped air)

Or


I can have the barbs at the bottom so that would mean shorter lengths of tubing to and from the rad but teh water will still have to climb to teh top of the rad through the narrorwer spaces of the radiator




any ideas which is best ? From a neatness of installation point of view having the barbs at the bottom would be best for me. Just wondered if there was any performance advantage or distadvatages.


cheers



Rich

Raider84
11-26-03, 04:01 PM
i doubt there would be a noticeable difference since the pump is forcing the water through. Go with the cleaner setup.

MuEagle05
11-26-03, 04:04 PM
I have my radiator lying on it's side. the water goes in the top, out the bottom. My thinking is less work to move the water through it, since essentially gravity does most of the work

MuEagle05
11-26-03, 04:06 PM
http://members.aol.com/iggyfrlife/new_setup.html

the middle pic shows my setup. The pump pumps up to the highest point, and eveything is downhill from there...back to the pump inlet which is the lowest point

Ven0m
11-26-03, 04:17 PM
If you decide for barbs at bottom and you don't have powerful pump, think about some way not to have air going in but not going out.

If barbs are on top, air bubbles are more likely to go through, when barbs are on bottom, they can stuck at top (but it's not certain that it will happen). Anyway the best way not to havebubbles would be to have inlet at the bottom and outlet just on top. Other good solution would be to have additional connection to remove air.

Anyway with rather more powerful pump, there's rather no risk to have air in rad.

eobard
11-26-03, 10:29 PM
Duplicate deleted. Next time just PM a mod to have it moved.

Muku
11-27-03, 12:14 AM
OR, you could go with the cleaner barbs at bottom route, and use the bleeding tube in rad method described here (http://forum.oc-forums.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=221003).
It will solve any air issues and make bleeding the system much easier, as well as more compact. (no res)

I like this idea, I think I may scrap my res and set this up on my rig too

Skulemate
11-27-03, 02:10 AM
Originally posted by MuEagle05
... My thinking is less work to move the water through it, since essentially gravity does most of the work
:bang head
I'm sorry, but gravity will contribute far less than the pressure difference that's driving the flow. Aside from removing air bubbles, the radiator's orientation doesn't matter.