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9月6日 What’s New Around HereHello Everyone, It has been a while since I put anything on my Live Space. I have been busy getting MySpace pages setup for the TV show and for myself. I started attending one of the largest private art schools in the country in June. The Academy of Art University in San Francisco. I have always been interested in TV and film since I was a little boy, and since I have a bunch of free time I decided to go back to school. I learned that I would need to buy a Mac computer in order to attend the university. As you can see from my last post I was very surprised and found the transition from PC to Mac not that difficult. The video editing software we are using is what many of the production houses use. Even Mr. Coppola uses it. So it can’t be to bad. After installing Final Cut Pro HD on my iMAC, which took several hours and over 60gb of hard disk space, I found a treasure trove of tools, Video filters, professional audio editing software, Color correction software, Title Software, the list is just incredible. I now have the task of taking all 28 episodes of the TV show and color correcting and audio correcting them. This I will have to do on my spare time. I started Classes in the Summer Semester so things were really crazy. Both classes I took were writing classes. I was maintaining a B average until I had an emergency room visit and took me longer to recover then expected. It’s heck getting old. Luckily I get to send in missing assignments in this week to make up the grade from summer. The fall semester plans to be much more fun. Photo Story Boarding and 8mm. Yes, they still make 8mm film. I even have an 8mm camera, projector and editing station. By the way, Did you know the show “Monk” is filmed on 16mm film then transferred to digital HD? I didn’t either till i read it in text book for the Non Linear video editing class. Which is my second class for the semester by the way. The third class is one of the classes I had to drop from summer. Storytelling. The instructor is an actual writer that works in TV and film industry and has a TV movie coming out on Sept 12th on the Hallmark channel called “Citizen Jane” and it is based on a real life true crime story. My instructor wrote the book and the teleplay, stars in it include Ally Sheedy (The Breakfast Club), Sean Patrick Flannery (Young Indiana Jones), Nia Peeples and rock star Meat Loaf Aday. And this is one of my instructors?!?!?! If you are going to learn something, learn it from someone that ACTUALLY does the job, and is successful at it, not from someone that did the job and wasn’t successful. Most of the instructors at the university are part time and work in the TV and or film industry full time. So I should be able to get a good education from it. Other things that are going on around here. My youngest daughter started kindergarten this year, my oldest is in high school now. Man time flies.My wife is hoping that I will be able to physically handle going to school. I tell her that we won’t know until I try. Other then the one minor incident in July I haven’t been feeling to bad. I am supposed to be going over the the University of Washington Research center sometime in the next few months to run a bunch more genetic tests and such. They want to study me for a while since they haven’t had a case as severe as mine and have no real data to do research from. It’s fun being a guinea pig. They hope top prevent my body from shredding itself apart from the inside. All of the connective tissues holding things in place are decaying and they have no idea how to stop or treat it. I had to stop taking the pain medications so I could attend school. I couldn’t think or study while taking them. So I now only take them at bedtime. My wife still works for Wal~Mart and is doing very well there. Once you have been with them for a while they take care of you real nicely. She is still working over night but she seems to like it. It also gives me plenty of time to work on computer and video stuff with out being disturbed. We hope to build our house within the next 5 yrs. I have most of the designs and modifications done. The architect hates it when I change things. And we may be able to start building in 4 to 5 yrs. It is going to be a very nice Log Home. Approximately 3,500 square feet for main house and a 1,500 sq foot guest house. The only problem we have is WHERE to build it. We were thinking of the south west area. We lived in New Mexico for 3 years and I liked it. Winters there are not very long and not as cold. So we have been looking in that general direction. I almost bought 10 acres in Arizona for dirt cheap and property even had a canyon with a stream running through it. only thing was NO UTILITIES, no electric , Telephone nothing. Electricity would be no problem Solar panels and wind generators, easy fix. The big problem would have been, NO EASY ACCESS to internet. Now that I just can’t go without. SAT internet is ok but still to slow for the file sizes I upload. 350 to 500 mb files can take a long time at 1mb upload. I will probably post some more videos on Veoh.com or MySpace soon so check those out if you can. Just look for Hedgy0 at both Veoh and MySpace, you should be able to videos from that. 8月16日 Interesting turn of events....I had the opportunity to use a Macintosh computer many many years ago. I wasn’t really impressed with it at that time. I am a PC man from the word go. I have been building them and custom designing systems for over 20 years. I decide to go to film school and guess what? The classes REQUIRE a Macintosh computer. Now, I haven’t really looked at a Mac at all. Luckily for me the University I attend had recommended systems for the classes I will be taking. I purchased a standard iMAC 2.66 Ghz system with 4Gb ram and 640GB hard drive. I should have opted for the full size keyboard. I also purchased Final Cut Pro Studio, which is the software we are learning at the university. I was surprised at how fast this dual core cpu was performing. I built a custom PC with quad-core cpu 5gb ram and 1.5 terabytes hard disk space, and doing a simple 30 second video render on the iMAC was nothing. It took maybe a minute at most. The custom PC took bout 5 minutes maybe a tad less then that. Either way the iMAC was showing me that with less HP on the CPU and less memory and hard disk space that it could do more, faster, then a built up PC that cost about $3,500 to build custom with liquid cooling. The iMAC in comparison was only $1,499.00
I am not sure if it is the hardware architecture or the operating system but the iMAC definitely has a big advantage of a Windows based PC. Sorry Microsoft but Macintosh wins the Video and Audio award. I am not quite ready to get rid of all of my PC’s yet but you never know. 10月9日 Hydrogen On Demand System with PhotosFirst let me say when Protium Fuel Systems says everything needed, They meant it. Well, for those of you that are interested in how we got the Hydrogen system to fit under the hood of the 2007 Trailblazer, We actually didn't. We mounted most of it in the bumper. Yes, the bumper. We pulled the plastic cover off of the bumper to get easier access to the areas we planned on mounting the water tank and RCR Unit We also mounted the pump near the RCR unit. The Amp gauge we mounted under dash with velcro and also used wire wrap to make it look more professional. We also mounted the Fuel Optimizer and then discovered we couldn't use it with Modulated Frequency sensors. Oh well. It all looks very professionally done. I thank Vern and his soldering iron for getting all the electrical connections done right and looking spiffy. 10月7日 Installing the Hydrogen on Demand SystemFirst off I must give you a few warnings. DO NOT use baking soda in a hydrogen system of any kind. Gasoline and diesel have chemicals in them to alert you of a poisonous gas called carbon monoxide. Using baking soda in a Hydrogen on demand system will also produce this gas, except it won't burn your throat, or irritate your eyes. You will just get sleepy and shortly there after be deceased. A system that says to use baking soda in the water should be avoided. The other thing to watch for is if it says to use glass jars for the electrolysis chamber. Personally to me having glass jars under the hood just don't sit right with me. They may work, but just look like something you would be embarrassed to show anyone. "Hey looky here Billy Joe I got me a six pack of mason jars under the hood." the glass jar systems also seem to only give you maybe 5 mpg more then not having it. The protium system is much more efficient and looks very impressive and professional. I doubled my mileage in town on the first day of running the Protium System. Ok, now on to installing the Protium kit. One thing you will need to know is whether your car or truck uses modulated frequencies on the MAF or MAP sensor. Call your local mechanic to find out if your vehicle does. That's what I did and got lucky to find someone who actually knew what I was talking about. If your vehicle does use modulated frequency sensors then you will not be able to use the protium fuel optimizer and should order the kit for the carbureted engines. I was told that basically that is the major difference between them is one uses the fuel optimizer. Once you have decided on what system you will need, then it is time to look under the hood for a good location for the water tank, the accumulator tank and the RCR unit. (the RCR unit is where all the action happens). Now on my 2007 Trailblazer there is almost NO ROOM under the hood to add anything. The accumulator MUST BE INSTALLED VERTICALLY!!! The RCR unit can be mounted either way. After several hours of trying to find a place and test fit the accumulator under the hood we found a spot behind the driver side headlight just before the battery. Just enough room to mount it, after slightly moving the car horns out of the way. We drilled a hole into the body and one into the frame at the top front part by the head light. These were the locations of the mounting bolts to hold the accumulator in place. Now that we have the spot for the accumulator that is about 8 inches long, it was time to find a spot for the RCR unit that was 12 inches long. It took us most of the day and a bunch of four letter words to even think of a place to put it. I was under the car looking toward the front of it and noticed a section right behind the bumper that had a small strut that held the ground effects on the front on. It was big enough to hold the RCR and close to the accumulator. In fact it was almost directly beneath it. Excellent!!!! Now the hard part. Trying to get it mounted. OK, I found a sturdy metal beam I can drill a mounting hole into and use the strut bar bolt for other end. Kool!! or so I thought. The one thing I didn't count on was not being able to get to the upper bolt to mount it to the strut bar. OH man what now? Ok how do we get the plastic cover off the bumper, nice only a few bolts and plastic pins holding it on. Now I have the plastic bumper off my brand new trailblazer and am drilling a hole into a metal beam on the front. While trying to remove the strut bar bolt which had a nut welded onto the frame, the bolt broke!!!! Oh Geez, we got like 4 days till we pack the truck up and move and one thing after another happens. OK, so I drill out the bolt and rethread the hole. Oops, Wrong thread for the replacement bolt. To bad your going in anyway. So I got a self tapper in and there it will stay. Bolt One of the RCR mounting bracket was now in place. I took the RCR unit and test fitted it on the mounting bracket, great it will work. Now I look at the frame where I drilled the hole for the other mounting bracket. Yikes, its almost 1/4 inch off. So I loosen the mounting bracket and bent it a bit to conform to the holes location. Perfect, or as close as it is gonna get. I got the bolts snugged up nicely and look proudly at my work. OK now the next part, running the hoses to the right places. There was one hole already in the body panel that will work nicely for the hose that goes from the accumulator back to the electric fuel pump and back to the RCR unit. And I can run the hose from the upper port of the RCR unit to the accumulator, just outside the body panel and up where some wires and another hose go. Follow the hose diagrams on the Protium site for proper hose connection. You should print the diagram out for best results. There is also a diagram online for the wiring without a fuel optimizer. If you follow the very well labeled wires and where they say to go you should have no problems hooking them up. The tubing that came with the system was just barely enough to go from the accumulator to air intake and from accumulator to pump. I purchased some more tubing to complete the installation. This was like the 5th trip to auto parts store for parts we needed for one reason or another. The guys at the auto store were getting real curious as to what we were doing to my trailblazer. We get the tubing all run and the wiring and we start the engine for the first time using hydrogen. And wouldn't you know it the Check Engine Light came on. I was prepared for this and shut the engine down and installed the oxyisolator that was supplied with my system. This solved the Check Engine Light immediately. Off we go to start our in town test. Which proved to be very surprising. We went from 13 mpg in town to 25 mpg in town. And as of this writing we are still increasing out mileage to 29.7 mpg in town. The single RCR unit is plenty of hydrogen for in town but at highway speeds it doesn't seem to be enough for a 6 cylinder. I will be ordering a second RCR unit and wiring kit to run two of them on one system. The fuel pump that is supplied with the system seems to be the weak link. We had to replace it 6 times in less then two weeks. We have been driving several hundred miles a day. I finally got a different type of pump and it seems to be working for now. The main problem seems to be the fuel filter on it. As the system breaks in it generates some rust that plugs up the filter and dries out the pump making it fail. After the second pump I removed the filter, It seemed to run longer but as soon as the system hit 30 amps the pump failed again. I think the pump failed due to rust buildup in the water. I went to another auto parts store and purchased a different type of pump, the previous one was a typical rotary style pump, this new one is similar to an air pump on a fish tank. It seems to be working for more then a few days. Which is as long as the other type lasted. So far so good. But we haven't put as many miles on it as we have the others. Although I did have to flush the water because the amps were at 30 again. And it's still working. I need to call Protium to discuss my findings. The one auto parts store didn't have what I needed so I went to another one that had a manager that was building the glass jar ones with baking soda. I informed him of the dangers of using baking soda, and showed him the one I had installed. He promptly asked me for the web address and called his friend that he had building the glass jar units. Needless to say he was planning on ordering several of the Protium systems. Using WATER AS FUEL for your car!How many times have we seen statements like this? Well, I have been looking online for several months. I finally found a company that not only had a high quality system but also thought of safety. The system has a cut-off in case of an accident or engine stall. This was a very big plus in my eyes. Although the system cost over $900 dollars, the equipment you receive is of very high quality. And the technical support is great. I ordered my kit back in July, and received it just a few days before our big move (they are on a 6 week back order)across country from New Mexico to Washington State. This left us with little time to test it before taking it on the road. Luckily for me Vern had arrived from Washington state to help us move back. With a little hard work and a lot of reconfiguring we got the kit installed. Total time was 3 days. The kit is supposed to be able to be installed in 2 hours. The reason for it taking so long was finding locations for the three main parts. The accumulator has to be mounted vertically, the RCR unit can be mounted in either direction. We found a small area behind the drivers side headlight that would hold the Accumulator, and mounted the main water tank to the back side of the bumper on the passenger side and the RCR unit mounted on the back side of the bumper on the drivers side. Vern came up with a great remote filler station so we wouldn't have to take the bumper cover off each time to fill it. After getting all three of the larger parts mounted we started on the wiring. There are extremely well labeled wires letting you know where they got connected. The relay and circuit breaker mounted to the fender well on the driver side with ease. the amp gauge mounted easily on the dash with the Velcro that was provided. The fuel optimizer however was a little difficult, Not in installing it or wiring it, but in its use. It seems that the optimizer does NOT WORK with MODULATED FREQUENCY MAF sensors. If your are not sure if yours use a modulated frequency then call up you local dealer and ask. Hopefully you will be as lucky as I was in finding a person that actually understood the question i was asking. So, after finding out the optimizer won't work for my 2007 Trailblazer we removed it. So now the system is installed, wiring all taped up or put into wire harnesses, it was time to test the in town mileage improvement. The trailblazer usually gets about 13 to 14 miles per gallon, the main reason we were looking for a fuel supplement system. We filled up the tank at our local Sams Club. After driving around town for 2 hrs and going up hills at 20 miles an hour, by the way the trailblazer actually performed much better then it did going up the same hills without the hydrogen hybrid system. After 60 miles we went back to the gas station and filled back up. To our surprise the trailblazer only took 2.5 gals of fuel. That was a 10 mile per gallon increase. And this was after the FIRST test. After talking with Protium Fuel Systems about it they said that it will improve over the first 180 hours of operation. That is basically the systems break in period. Now during this first 180 hours of operation you will have to rinse the system out to flush out the rusty muddy colored water. Since we didn't get a chance to test the system on highway before hand we had to hope for the best on the road. The only real problem we had was the electric fuel pump that comes with the system has a fuel filter on it. The only thing we can figure is the filter would plug up and deprive the pump of water and burn up. We decided this after the second pump we purchased at Auto Zone did the same thing. So I decided to skip the fuel filter on the third pump. So far its working great after 3 days (others only lasted a day) of use and the amount of rust colored water is far less. On the trip to Washington we had to replace the pump several times. But at one point we could not find a auto parts store within hours of driving from our location and had to run the system with out it. Lucky for me Verns ingenious remote water fill station was gravity feeding into the RCR unit. So the hydrogen built up a bit in the RCR unit but then would move up to the accumulator and into the engine. Since the Hydrogen was basically free flowing up into the intake of the engine we were unable to get an accurate reading on mileage improvement, Until now that is. At 148.7 miles of highway and city combined driving we can give an actual number for average miles per gallon. 148.7 miles used a total of 5 gallons of fuel. for those without a calculator that comes to 29.74 miles per gallon average. A heck of an improvement from the 13 city and 22 highway we were getting with a combined average of 17 miles per gallon. Now the system still is not broke in yet and we are still getting better mileage each day. I am NOT saying that you will get this great of an increase. I am saying you WILL get an increase, of how much depends on how you drive and how bad of shape your engine is in. In my opinion, Protium Fuel Systems lives up to its word. The parts are of high quality and the tech staff volunteer there time to help you get the system installed and running correctly. There system really works. And it works on both Gasoline AND Diesel Fuel. I highly recommend getting one of these systems for your vehicle. If you don't have room for it under the hood, try looking at behind the bumper or between the front grill and radiator. You will want the accumulator as close to the air intake as possible but keep it away from the exhaust manifold. Since we have a straight six cylinder we mounted the accumulator on the opposite side of the exhaust manifold. As the mileage improves or goes down I will let you all know. I know it seems to good to be true but the conversion of water to hydrogen and oxygen using electrolysis has been around since 1806. Yes, that's right almost 70 years before cars started using gasoline for fuel. I have yet to have the emissions tested but I will be doing that in a week or so to let you know how it goes. Until then, Check out Protium Fuel Systems at the following web site. www.protiumfuelsystems.com The Long Journey HomeIt's approximately 3 AM on September 11th. We all are tired from loading the truck after driving 3 hours to pick it up, spend a few hours at the space museum then drive the truck back to Roswell. Vern and I packed everything we could that day and it was time to take a shower and get a few hours of sleep. We get back up around 8 am and continue the loading of the 16 foot truck. At first it appears that we will have plenty of room. As the boxes seemingly appear out of thin air to be loaded onto the truck we realize that its going to be a very tight fit. If not for Verns expert packing we would have had to leave several things behind. The loading continues throughout the rest of the day. After a few naps and continuous boxing and packing we get the last of the truck finished. Now it's time to get the Subaru onto the trailer. It's 3 AM on Friday now and starting to rain. Vern and I have had almost no sleep. We get the car on the trailer and hooked to the 16 foot Penske truck. We gather up the last of the stuff in the house and begin our long adventure across the country. At this point we really haven't tested the hydrogen system on the trailblazer. We got excellent results for in town driving but haven't had a real highway test yet. During the first 180 hours of use, we are supposed to change out the water when the amp meter reaches 30 amps. First off, the amp gauge was reading just over 5 amps when the car was off, it also read this amount before we even installed it. We pull out onto the open road towards the west at about 3:30 AM. It's a 5 day journey back to Washington and we had to be back there by the 17th. It will be tight be we know we can make it. I am in contact with Vern via a hand held two way radio system he brought with him. We soon discovered that if I was more then 1/4 mile ahead or behind him that we had a very hard time hearing him. We maintained a speed of 55 to 60 mph. This was the best speed we could do safely with the truck pulling the car on a trailer. Going up any long or steep hills provided to be a challenge for the truck. We did discover that the trailblazer with the hydrogen on demand system had better power going up hills and mountain passes without having to drop out of overdrive to often. We planned on stopping in as many places as possible. However time was against us and traveling at 55 mph proved to be a real pain in the behind. Traveling at this speed we would not be able to see some of the things we wanted to see. One of our first stops was the Ice cave in New Mexico. It is completely weird to see ice on the ground when its 75 to 80 degrees out. But as you descend into the cave opening the temperature drops to 31 degrees. So the ice stays frozen. No one really knows how the ice cave was started or formed but it is different. On the second day we got to see the Painted Desert, Petrified forest in Arizona. We then proceeded to the Grand Canyon. We got separated in the grand canyon park for about 3 hrs. I was out driving around looking for Vern and the Penske truck while he was looking for us. Vern had all the camping gear in the Penske. I got us a space at the campground and went looking for Vern. He finally found the park and was at the campsite when I returned. We quickly setup camp and got the campfire going. We got up fairly early the next day and went to the main viewing area of the Grand Canyon. All I can say is it doesn't look real. It's so huge and vast and majestic. No camera or video can ever capture all the beauty of it. Pictures just cant capture the beauty. You must see this for yourself if you ever get the chance. and take a week or two to do it. It is HUGE. We change out the water in the hydrogen system because it is showing 30 amps. They recommend changing the water at this point, and for the first 180 hours of operation you may have to do this several times. Vern and I came up with a draining system for the kit that seems to work well. It's almost noon and we get back on the road again heading for Flagstaff and the Lowell observatory. One stop I really wanted to see. It was great to see a part of our scientific history. I learned a few things that I didn't know and we had fun playing the with the interactive displays that they had set up there. We spent about an hour there and we were behind schedule so we try to get as many miles as we can. We make it to Lake Mead (Katheryns Landing) after a very long day of driving. We setup camp there and didn't even bother with the tent rainfly. Sky was clear, temp was warm, and it was late. We fill out the campground info card and head off to bed. At the crack of dawn I proceed to get everyone up and moving. We have a ton of miles we need to put on the truck and no time for any delays or stops. From this point on its about how far we can get in a day. Vern and I push ourselves to the limit as we slowly climbed the steep mountain pass that winds around some extremely scary cliffs and Vern is doing this in a Penske truck towing a car trailer. by the time we get to the campground the Penske truck is almost out of fuel, warning light is on, needle on E. And seemingly no place to fill it up at. So, off comes the fuel line on the Subaru which has been extremely well fastened to its trailer and we proceed to drain some fuel from it for the truck. We spend the night at a campground called Grover Hotsprings. They warn us that bears have been coming into the campground during the night and day. We unload the truck to set up camp. Vern parks the truck in the overflow parking area and we begin to hear wolfs howling in the distance. Vern feels that they were up near the overflow parking area. Kool, neighbors. After listening to them howl for about an hour or so we turn in to get some sleep, California is a long state to drive through. And we are only bout halfway through it. The plan now is to head up the 395 all the way home and get us back on the morning of the 17th. We get out on the road pretty early and get the truck filled up with some gas. We stop to fill up the trailblazer as well. We continue driving as long as we can only stopping for bathroom breaks, fuel, and food. After many hours and I don't know how many miles we finally arrive at our destination of Moses Lake at 3:00 AM of the 17th. We decide to stay in a hotel for the night and get in touch with people later on in the morning. The journey was done but now we need to unload the truck into storage, The two tarantulas in the truck are doing fine. Family members show up to help us unload the truck because it needs to be in Pasco on the 17th. I call up the truck rental place at 4:30 PM and tell them we finally got the truck unloaded and are in Moses Lake, they close at 5 so no way am I making it down there in time. The wonderful lady on the phone said we can bring it in the next morning no problem. Kool. I go to the cab of the truck and checked on the tarantulas to find both have deceased. I guess the heat of the day got to them in the cab of the truck. Now the task of finding affordable housing is at hand. The cost of living here is about twice that of living in Roswell. So into the newspaper and nickel saver we go looking for a place and filling out tons of rental applications at all the local realtors. I will let you know when we get a place to live. As for now, I go to Safeway and sign into there free WiFi at the Starbucks inside and check mail, upload photos, and write this blog. 2月28日 Putting the Plumbing in the Computer
Sounds weird doesn't it? Well, for this computer we added liquid cooling so, now we have to figure out the best way to run the plumbing for it. I bought the ThermalTake Bigwater 745 system. It uses 3/8 inside diameter hoses. (pretty good size by the way.) I also added on a few extra plumbing components. Water block for memory chips, hard drive and chipset. Although the chip set already has a cooling system on it. (Didn't know that when I ordered it). But the chipset block can also be used for video GPU or other chips on Motherboard. (Like southbridge.)
One thing to know about liquid cooling your system is the flow rate. If it flows to fast the liquid won't be able to transfer enough heat to the radiators. Yes, the computer has radiators just like in a car. This one has two. A single fan one and a dual fan one. The dual fan was designed to be mounted outside the computer case and comes with a stand. It also can be mounted inside at the rear fan locations or on the outside at the rear fan locations. I currently have mine mounted on inside but may move it to outside case location. A good thing to know is the direction of flow through your pump and reservoir. Also, it is good to note the amount of fluid it can pump in an hour. This can do 400 Liter per hour. Some are much higher. There is a cooling system out there for just about every kind of system or multi-system setup you may have. Make sure you have an idea where the plumbing is going to go to first. For this computer setup we will be going from pump to CPU, then to Memory Chips, then up to the hard drives then to radiator #2 (dual fan) and radiator #1 then back to reservoir.
My friend Vern also made a good comment about keeping the incoming coolant separate from the outgoing coolant tubing. They can transfer heat back and forth. Don't need warm coolant going into the CPU now do we. I did the best I could on that part. I have a little space between the incoming and outgoing tubes. Getting the length of tubing is extremely important. Cutting it to long and you will get kinks in tubing slowing flow rate and increase pressure. To short and you get the same thing. What I did to help solve this was take full length of tubing and mounted one end to first the CPU and then routed it back to pump. I routed it the best way I could to not have any kinks in it. I then went from CPU to the memory chips. Now this is where it got interesting. I went to FrozenCPU.com and clicked the 1/4 inch cooling systems, and selected the Bigwater 745 listed there and then memory and drive and chipset cooler, all 1/4 inch inside diameter. NOPE, the Bigwater is actually 3/8 inch inside diameter. I called frozenCPU and they said that Bigwater was usually 1/4 inch and then sold me the reducer fittings I needed to complete system. Now this is going to have some effect on the flow rate through the memory chips, and hard drive section of the cooling system. I will probably add a flow meter to system later on to double check this. But the on board sensors say everything is well within heat levels.
Now that I have the reducer on the tube coming from the CPU and have 1/4 inch tubing to go from there, we can continue. The hard part about this is that now I have added the reducer and it has made it a little harder to get length correct to prevent kinking. With a little trial and effort and a little cutting here and there we got it set. I then routed tubing from memory to the hard drive coolant pack. From the hard drive pack to, oops need another reducer here. Luckily I had ordered 2. One for incoming one for out going. Ok, we are now going from the last piece of hardware to be cooled to the actual radiators now. The first radiator is the dual fan one mounted inside case. Right behind the hard drive area by the way. I had to test fit and refit tubing several times to get it to fit without kinking. But it is done. We then go from double fan radiator to the single fan radiator below it. Not a hard one at all. I routed the output from single to the reservoir. System tubing is all done. Now for those of you thinking this is WATER, it isn't. It is a nonconductive fluid that comes with the system. I also recommend getting a second or third bottle of this liquid. The original system was able to hold 300ml of fluid, but since I added the extra parts we will need more. Each bottle of the fluid is 500ml. Not enough for what I have setup in the system. So make sure you have plenty of fluid. It won't do much good to have a pump running dry when you turn the system on. All the tubing connections should be hand tight, and double check the radiator connectors to make sure they are seated properly. One came loose when I took the locking nut off of one of the connectors.This can cause leaks. So double check all connections in ENTIRE system. You will probably need a small funnel to fill the coolant reservoir. A second person to help spot leaks as you turn system on and are filling the reservoir as the fluid gets cycled around the system. OK, now for the first time of turning on system. We turn on the power and I was quickly surprised how fast the fluid was going through all the tubing. OOPS got a leak at radiator #2 power down real fast. Rags are also a good thing to have at this point.Not a big leak just a drop here and there, no spurting or anything. Tightened up the fitting a bit, dried up the tiny amount of fluid that leaked and turned system back on. You will need to keep an eye on the reservoir at this point, it goes down fast as all the tubing and water blocks get full. I had to have over 1000ml for the added stuff for pump to maintain a full level. You will notice air bubbles in the tubes here and there. Gently move the tubes a bit to get them out. I noticed a few and once they got removed from where they were at seemed to flow through to reservoir very easily. As the system came online and my wife and I are watching for leaks, I turned the Monitoring software on to check speed of fans and temperature of CPU and Motherboard. CPU temp maintained a 67 degrees and motherboard at 70 for several hours with little usage. Now the real test. To max out the CPU as much as possible and see how it is affecting the temps. A great program for testing it was the BOINC software for networked computing for med research. The Rosetta data crunching is very intense for a computer to run. I loaded up BOINC and Rosetta and told it to run 100 Percent CPU usage. Now since it has dual core, the BOINC software ran two Rosetta files at once. Now this is going be fun. I watched the CPU usage meter peg at 100, memory went to 35 %. I then let it run this for over 6 hours of non stop data crunching. I monitored the system every few minutes and watched as the temperatures climbed rather quickly when CPU hit 100 %. It then stayed at 82 degrees for almost the entire 6 hours, the motherboard was hitting 95 degrees. A lot better then 100 plus temps for the CPU and MB that I was used to seeing on air cooled only systems. As of this writing the system rarely gets to 90 degrees on CPU and has never hit 100 for the Motherboard. Make sure that you also have some fans running in the system to help remove heat from the non liquid cooled components, like the cd ROM, video card, other add on cards. I added one more case fan to the system. Just to be safe. Heat kills computers, the more you can get rid of the heat, the longer and better your system will run. I added a 120cm 70 cubic feet per minute fan to the front of the case right in front of the video card. They generate a lot of heat from those higher end video cards. So make sure you have a good way of cooling them. I have to admit I was skeptical about putting a LIQUID in the computer case. But after seeing the efficient cooling it does and also makes it look nice inside to. The pump and CPU have a blue LED UV light on em. The tubing and fluid are both UV reactive. Kind of cool looking, and helps to spot fluid leaking. I may just add one more small LED to make it look nice.
Well there you have it. Computer is built and running Windows Vista Ultimate with a rating of 5.4 out of a scale upto 5.9. The CPU ran 5.4, Memory 5.6, drives 5.7 and video card at 5.9. Lowest score determines system final score. 2月16日 Hooking up the Motherboard cabling
This mother board has two power connections. The EATXPower connection and ATX 12v connection. The EATX connector can only be inserted one way, attach the cable from the power supply with the EATX connector on it. Make sure it is securely fastened. Now connect the ATX 12v cable from the power supply to the motherboard. Now would be a good time to connect the hard drive cables to the drives and motherboards. Follow your motherboard manufacturers directions as to there location on the board. This is the first time I have used SATA drives. I was informed that you need to make sure the SATA cable matches the drive. Some cables are 150mb/s transfer rate and others are at 300mb/s. Check the side of cable to see what it is rated. If it doesn't say then check the end connectors, for 300mb/s rate cable it should have more then 4 pins in the connector. (Thank you Vern for this helpful information). The SATA drives also have a different power connector then IDE drives. The connector is more flat. Connect the power and data cables up to each of the drives you have. The motherboard I am using has 6 SATA connectors on it. Again, check your manual that comes with your motherboard to see which ones to use first. Make all cable connections from hard drives to motherboard. The case came with 5 internal fans, the liquid cooling came with 3 more additional fans mounted on radiators. A double fan radiator and a single fan radiator. The single fan radiator has a speed control that you can mount in an empty bracket on the back or you can do what I did and plug it into one of the motherboard CPU or chasis fan speed control connectors. The chipset on this motherboard has a HUGE solid cooper heat sink with ribs on top and pipe that goes to a small copper fin radiator. It to also has a small fan that is connected to speed control on motherboard. Total 12cm fans for this system is 8. 4 intake with filters and 4 exhaust, three of which are on radiators. The power supply has a built in 14cm intake fan that draws air from the side. And it is very quiet. The total noise volume coming from the system is very low. The fans are extremely quiet. I highly recommend the case, it is very well designed.
Once all the cables are in, try organizing them and tieing them up out of the way. it will make it easier later on to work on if you don't have to fight your way through a jungle of wires and cables. Installing Motherboard into CaseNow that the motherboard is ready to put into the case we need to make sure the case is ready. I removed the two bottom intake fans from the front just to make sure I had plenty of room. Then i realized what I had forgotten to do. Mark the holes I needed for the mounting standoffs on the backside of mounting plate. Oh boy. Well I got a small drill bit and started poking holes through the sound dampening material from the backside of the mounting plate. Held motherboard up in the case almost where it was flush with the back end face plate for all the external connections. This greatly aided me in locating the proper holes. Now i have to remove the back face plate to put the one that matches the motherboard in. After getting all the holes poked and getting the standoffs in we are now ready to place the motherboard into the case. Be aware of the back faceplate and make sure everything lines up well. Starting with the motherboards center mounting screw on top i began to just snug down the screws to hold it in. DO NOT tighten these down real hard you can damage the motherboard. you can lay the case on one side to make aligning and tightening easy on yourself. After getting all 9 of this motherboards screws in, I then put the memory chips in. Total of 4 1gb chips. I learned that you need to make sure certain motherboards have certain types of chips that are approved for use in your motherboard. These I made sure were on the approved list. After the memory chips are all snug, and the locking clamps snap down on them i can now put a memory chip cooling unit on. The one unit cools 2 chips at a time. It has three small bags of heavy plastic material that fills with liquid. Each bag goes on one side of chip. The center bag goes between two chips. See photo for better idea of how this works. The coolant comes in from top of one chip and out on top of the other. You can hook up two of these together to cool all 4 memory chips. they have a slight angle on the top for the tubing, make sure if you use two, that they angle away from each other. Tighten down the end clamps that go over the chips snap on clamps. Again hand tighten, and you don't need to be a gorilla about it. Replace fans or whatever else you may have removed prior to installing the motherboard. Check the rear face plate to make sure all external connections are lined up properly. Congratulations, your computer is really starting to take shape now. Putting the CPU in with water block
Ok, probably the most important thing I can think of here is GROUND yourself first. I left the Motherboard on the anti-static bag it was in and wore latex gloves to keep any oils from hands getting on things. I first had to find the parts needed to put the water block for the CPU on. An H bracket and gaskets that are mounted on the underside of Motherboard, long mounting screws and top H bracket to hold the water block tight on the chip. I first place the thin stiffer gasket on bracket, self adhesive on it. Then placed the thicker foam gasket on that. Pulled the backing of the foam strip so it would adhere to back of motherboard positioned it over the holes for mounting in under CPU/motherboard. Now, for the fun part. Putting the CPU into the socket!! OK, first off this is using an LGA 775 socket. On other cpu's the pins are on the chip. On this there are tiny metal wafer thin blades coming up in the socket that plug into the chip. It is EXTREMELY Important you don't bend, touch are breathe hard on these. The chip has an arrow in one corner, you really need to follow the directions that came with your motherboard and cpu for this, so READ EM!! Gently placing the chip into the slot I lowered the cpu cover, making sure it didn't bind. Then I brought the release lever back up to locked position. Chip is in. Won't know if it is in right till you power up. Good luck at this point on that. I then took the really long screws and put them through the bracket in all for corners. On the top side of motherboard I put washers on the screws to help hold em in place and to insulate. OK, now they chip is in and locked down time for the massive and heavy solid copper water block with lexar top clear cover on it. You need to put heat sink grease on the cpu BEFORE putting the water block on to help transfer heat from the cpu to the water block. Then place the second H bracket onto the water block. It goes only one way. Tighten it down HAND tight with the nuts that are provided with the water block. This one also happens to have a nice Blue LED in it to give the cpu a little glow. Looks nice that way. Plug the power cord into a cpu fan connector. OK all done. Motherboard ready to install into case. 2月14日 Putting in the Hard drives and DVD burner
The first thing your gonna need to do is to get someone to help you pull the front cover off the case to get to the external 5.25" drive bays. You are also going to want to pull the internal 3.5" drivebay.you are going to want to put the 3.5 inc drives into the removable bay section and put it back into the machine. You will discover this will hinder your mounting of the 5.25 drives. The left side of 5.25 drive bay screws will be covered by the 3.5" removable bay. I learned this on my own, so now you wont have to. There is one screw on the front of each drive slot holding the front grill in place. Remove them. On the right side you will see a plastic locking slider, you should push this towards the front of case before mounting any 5.25 drives. I put my DVD burner in the third slot from the top. On this case the top slot is a 7 inch wide bay. It is for the optional slideout pop up 7 inch LCD monitor. The bay below that is for the secondary power supply if you add the the second motherboard. (Mini ITX). The third slot, where I put my DVD burner, is supposed to be for the Hard drive for the secondary mother board. Now since I have purchased the Hard drive liquid cooling pack I thought I would give it a go. First off the cooling pack isn't really designed for removable drive bays. (didn't know that till today), second, it will not allow the drive holes to align with the holes in the drive bay. I had both the 320gb and 500gb drive attached to both sides of the cooling pack. The drives are held onto the pack with 4 crews with plastic locking washer thing. ( see photo) These little things mount to the 4 holes on the bottom of each drive and then are inserted into the grooves on the cooling pack. You really have to push em fairly hard onto the pack and slide em to lock into place. The end result is both drive circuit boards are touching the heavy lined bag that will fill with coolant. and on one end is another swing lock fastener to keep em from moving. They are real snug on this thing. Looks pretty nice doesn't it. The 3.5 removable bay has rubber grommets and comes with special mounting screws, you are given plenty of em with the case. The rubber mounts help keep vibration and noise from the vibration down. Now onto the 5.25 side of the case. You can lock the 5.25 drive in place with the plastic slider and then on other side put two screws in to keep it solid. Next hook up the power and data cables and for CD/DVD drives add the sound cable. Re insert the 3.5 inch drive bay and tighten down the thumb screws. If using IDE drives make sure jumpers are set to master/slave and same with the CD/DVD ROM drives.
2月11日 Starting on the Computer Project
The Computer case had a hard time finding the house, well, actually UPS couldn't find the house, but yet they marked it as delivered. I called em up to find out exactly where they delivered it. After bout an hour I was informed that it was actually still on the truck and they were not sure why the driver marked it as delivered. ALWAYS track your packages online. It may help keep you from getting ripped off. The first thing I did was to measure out the sound dampening material. It is basically a layer off light foam rubber.I cut it out to fit the bottom of the case, the door of the case to help cut down on possible noise from that. I even put some around the rear exhaust fans. The material I got was from FrozenCPU.com. I highly recommend these people if you are looking for cooling systems and case. That's where I got this one from. The liquid cooling system, video card, power supply, sound dampening material all arrived on Friday. I promptly followed the directions with the power supply to do a bench test on it to make sure it works. The Thermaltake 850 watt power supply is , well, SWEEET. I couldn't even here the fan running on it. I had to look at the fan and make sure it was running. It also has a rubber gasket to help eliminate vibration. It did make it a little hard to match up to the screw hole but I managed to get it in.
You can see it has a huge fan on it. It also has Modular Cable plug ins. I only have to plug the cables in that I will actually use. No more dangling empty wire harnesses. Speaking of witch the wires were wrapped in a black mesh and had heat shrink tubing on the ends. A very neat and well thought out piece of equipment. On a scale of 1 to 10 I give this a 10+. If you are wondering exactly how Big this case actually is then you may want to look at the following pictures. I told ya it was a BIG case didn't I? Well, Monday the rest of the components should arrive. I am getting a little concerned though. UPS has sent the monitor to Albuquerque then to Carlsbad, (which means it went through here) then from Carlsbad back to Albuquerque, (again going right through here one more time). Now let's see if it makes it back to Roswell on Monday. I also tested the fans for the liquid cooling system to make sure they all worked. They did. And to my surprise they were almost as quiet as the power supply. Well, the liquid cooling system is also made by Thermaltake. I purchased the Bigwater 745 system which uses 3/8" inside diameter tubing. HOWEVER, FrozenCPU.com had it listed under the 1/4" systems, so I ordered the chipset water block, hard drive cooler and memory cooler with 1/4" fittings. Once it all got here and I realized what had happened I called FrozenCPU.com and they were surprised to hear that the Bigwater used 3/8", they usually use 1/4". I then had them send me couplers to go from 3/8" to 1/4" tubing. No biggy. The single fan radiator also has a speed control on it that I will hook to the motherboard to control the speed of the fan as the system needs. I will tell you more about the motherboard once it gets here Monday. You're not gonna believe what features it has on it. That's all for this round. Expect to see more postings and photos on Monday or Tuesday. 2月6日 Building a New ComputerThis is the year we Build a New ComputerAfter many yrs of figuring out what we wanted in a computer, this is the year we finally get to build it. I have been trying to build a decent video editing machine for over ten years. Something always came up to prevent me from building one. This year is different however. After weeks and weeks of hunting for parts, finding out what new technology may be useful, finding the best possible prices on the components that we will need, I finally got a reasonable system figured out. Everyone was helpful in locating places online to search for parts. But it seems I always wound up coming back to one place that always seemed to have the best pricing on the parts i needed. That place is www.Newegg.com. The only thing they didnt have was the special case and liquid cooling system I wanted to use. I got those from www.frozenCPU.com. The case is able to hold 12 drives and a slide out 7 inch lcd monitor, and it also can hold two motherboards. I will be adding photos later as the parts come in and I start putting it together. Here is a partial listing of some parts:
That's pretty much what we got plus a few extra water blocks for memory and chipset and hard drive cooling system. Well that is it for now. The parts should start arriving by the 8th of February. I will take photos of them as they come in and I start assembling them. 1月22日 Hatching outWell, the baby cricketts after having fallen are hatching anyway. Not sure of the number of them yet, they keep hoppin all over and are the size of a pin head.you can see the size difference between those that recently hatched and those that hatched a few days ago.I have notice a color change in them as well. When first born they are dark in color. after a day oir two they are larger and almost white. Probly due to them shedding there skin.the ones born a few days ago are twice the size at least of those born today.the babies we had bought from the store a few weeks ago have already grown to large adult size and are ready to begin the next grop of egg laying.
The batch that is hatching now was from about 24 crickets breeding. The group that is about to start laying is closer to 100. We estimate with only a period of three days of laying eggs we have well over a few hundred babies. Minus the ones lost in carpet during spill. I can only imagine how many eggs will be layed by 100 over a period of 7 days. That is how long I will leave the egg laying containers in with them. As I get more hatcheries built I will continue to cycle egg laying containers in and out of the 100 adults cage. So I could have 10's of thousands of crickets in a relatively short period of time.
The crickets sell in stores for 9 to 10 cents a piece depending on where you go. I sell em to stores for 5 to 7 cents each but hey i in for fun not profit. As long as the crickets pay for themselves does it really matter.
I have built a new hatchery that can house 6 egg containers comfortably, and plan on building another one soon. IF you wish to try to start a small hatchery it is kind of fun.get at least 2 rubbermaid type containers, High walled is a must at least 2 feet high.the hatchery can be closed but needs air holes drilled into it. Temperature needs to be between 80-85 degrees and the soil needs to retain moisture. I spray mine with a spray bottle if they start to look dry. I put a wet paper towel in with them in case they cant get water from the soil. I also Grind up cricket food into a fine powder. It's easier for them to eat as a powder when they are so young. I use pringle canister lids for food and water dishes.
The adults can stay in about 75 degree range and need a water and food dish. Make sure you put at least one egg carton in for them to hide in. Depending on the number of crickets you have you may need more. Remember they will kill each other and eat each other if they are not housed or fed properly.
Share your thoughts on this subject if you want me to keep this topic going or not. See ya all later.
1月18日 Baby Crickets
1月8日 Cricket RaisingCricket Raising
Well, I started a cricket ranch/farm or whatever you may want to call it. It is actually pretty easy to do.you will need several plastic containers, such as 5 gal buckets, stoirage containers with high sides, at least 2 feet tall, remember they jump. You will also need calmp on lamps to put on each bucket, the crickets prefer about 75 degrees or so. Do not use any bedding other than egg crates. You will also need a smaller plastic container with potting soil or finely ground up wood in it. It will need to be moist. I use square throw away tupperware type containers. I have mine in a 55 gal storage container as well with a clamp on light. I have a second one for the smaller crickets, the bigger ones will eat the smaller ones. Need to keep em seprate.
You will also need a hatchery or two or three or four. Hatchery is basically a styrofoam container with the smaller tupperware with the potting soil or ground up wood. I got the wood filler from pet store. Don't use shavings from natural sources. You may introduce other insects or diseases into your colony. The hatchery will need to be kept at between 80-85 degrees, and needs to have ventilation holes in top to let out excess moisture and heat. Place the tupper ware egg container into another small plastic container that will keep the babies from crawling up the sides.
I used purchased food from pet store for crickets. They also need to have water. you can use a wet paper towel or a dish. if you use a dish put a sponge and or paper towel in it otherwise the babies will drown.
It was interesting to see the female crickets take to the egg laying container so quickly. after one day they were laying eggs one after another. Each female will lay aproximately 100 eggs. When the babies are big enough remember to put some into the breeding colony to replace the ones that die off. Adult crickets live aprox. 6 weeks. Crickets dont have wings until they become adults.so, if you think your gonna hear a bunch of noise, you wont. Except from the breeding colony every now and then.
I then take the semi mature crickets to pet stores to sell or to bait shops. Retail on em is 9 to 10 cents a cricket. and with 6 or 7 females laying 100 eggs each, it adds up. And they do this all day long.
I will post some pics of the different containers and such as i get some takin. Here are a few links if you want to check it out.
These are the sites I went to to learn what i needed to do. It really isn't that hard. And its interesting to watch em lay the eggs.
Just thought I would Share somethin with ya all.
12月22日 Shutting down MSN SiteHello There everyone,
For those of you that were at our MSN site I am shutting it down and moving the photos and such here. You can leave comments by adding to this blog. Let us know you found our new home on the internet. Hope to hear from you soon.
9月13日 Chat at WWW.IROCK109.COMHey all you people out there,
Got an email that MSN is closing down the MSN community Chat rooms. I have found a cool place to hang out and chat as well as listen to one of the best internet radio stations out there. Check out WWW.IROCK109.COM. You can chat with live DJ's and other listeners. Request songs, and chat with other listeners. You can chat using the Java chat on the website or by using an IRC chat program like mIRC. Hope to see you there soon. 8月1日 SCI FI Channel Does ECW belong Here?Do we really need or want the ECW with its exhibitionist females and blood and excessive brutality to be on the scifi channel which i used to watch untill they brought this kind of NON SCI FI programming to the public. Tell me what you think of the situation. |
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