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Guru3D.com » News » Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display

Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 04/27/2019 08:51 AM | source: bitspower | 6 comment(s)
Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display

Meet the new water block from Bitspower, this Touchaqua CPU Block Summit MS OLED is intended for Intel processors with a LGA 775, LGA 115x or 2011/2066 socket and has both RGB and a small OLED screen displaying coolant temperature. 

Fabbed with CNC the copper base and a bit of plastic get integrated RGB lighting and a small OLED display (for displaying the water temperature). Both the OLED and RGB are powered with the same single cable, RGB can be adjusted in Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, ASRock and Razer software. The Bitspower Touchaqua CPU Block Summit MS OLED For Intel Platform (BPTA-CPUMS-OLED) was not yet listed with a price.

Bitspower Touchaqua CPU Block Summit MS OLED For Intel Platform

Part of the Summit series, the Summit MS OLED CPU water block will bring a unique look to your PC - without compromising on efficiency. The block features a stylish top plate design and digital RGB lighting, as well as a digital thermal sensor and a bright OLED display so you can monitor your water cooling loop temperature.
Compatible with LGA 115x and LGA 2066 socket configurations, the Summit MS OLED is constructed with the same high-quality materials and precise craftsmanship that users have come to expect from Bitspower.

Features :

1. Brings a unique style to your PC with a stylish top plate design
2. Block top cover made by hi-quality acrylic.
3. Fantasy light can be changed as you want.
4. A single wire runs power to both the DRGB lighting and the illuminated temperature gauge
5. Block base made by hi-quality copper C1100.
6. RoHS compliant.

  • Screen: OLED display
  • Temperature display: Celsius
  • Temperature: 0~99°C
  • Rated Voltage: DC 5V
  • Power Consumption: Max 0.07W


Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display




« Intel 10nm Ice Lake processors will be available significant quantities this year · Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS water block for Intel procs has RGB and small OLED display · New AMD Radeon graphics card PCB photos with GDDR6 memory - NAVI Spotted? »

2 pages 1 2


DeskStar
Senior Member



Posts: 1117
Joined: 2011-01-11

#5663952 Posted on: 04/27/2019 02:44 PM
Awesome! Now forget the RGB and release an all black POM Acytal with OLED display.

And seeing that 0-99 Celsius degree range rating won't hurt my mentals as much as that acrylic does. "Crrrrrrrrrrack!.!.!.".

Always enjoy the write-ups Hilbert...thanks as always...

rl66
Senior Member



Posts: 2751
Joined: 2007-05-31

#5664060 Posted on: 04/28/2019 11:19 AM
I know that feeling :)
If you get 99°c you might need new radiator and pump depending on your flow.
If it's not enough you have also the option to cool the coolant, you will found that in industrial computer shop or (and it work more silent) in nordic fish tank shop, it's less expensive than vaccum cooling and more "everyday use" than LN2 :)

jura11
Senior Member



Posts: 2449
Joined: 2015-03-20

#5664407 Posted on: 04/29/2019 09:22 PM
Awesome! Now forget the RGB and release an all black POM Acytal with OLED display.

And seeing that 0-99 Celsius degree range rating won't hurt my mentals as much as that acrylic does. "Crrrrrrrrrrack!.!.!.".

Always enjoy the write-ups Hilbert...thanks as always...

Hi there

There is no pump(maybe some sort of industrial Lowara or Laing) and mainly seals and gasket which will last water temperatures higher than 60-65°C and therefore be scared of Acrylic is no point

I have used several blocks which have been fully acrylic and no issues although they're prone to cracking if you over tightening the fittings which you shouldn't do, by hand is more than enough, you don't need to use any tools

Hope this helps

Thanks, Jura

jura11
Senior Member



Posts: 2449
Joined: 2015-03-20

#5664412 Posted on: 04/29/2019 09:36 PM
I know that feeling :)
If you get 99°c you might need new radiator and pump depending on your flow.
If it's not enough you have also the option to cool the coolant, you will found that in industrial computer shop or (and it work more silent) in nordic fish tank shop, it's less expensive than vaccum cooling and more "everyday use" than LN2 :)

If you are see water temperature higher than 60-65°C then you are in trouble for sure and in 99°C I would suspect seals, pump and some gaskets wouldn't last such temperatures maybe for short time

I know on friend loop pump failed and he didn't realised that as this PC is used as render node and during the rendering PC just shut down and he went to check and saw reservoir cracked and every seal on fittings and blocks, blocks he run POM Acetal etc and water temperatures from old logs have been in 60-70's

Usually I target 30-40°C water temperatures as max for high ambient loops, on my loop I see max water temperature as 24-26°C and in higher ambient like 32-34°C water temperature is still under 5°C from ambient or rather my water delta T is under 5°C

Hope this helps

Thanks, Jura

DeskStar
Senior Member



Posts: 1117
Joined: 2011-01-11

#5664552 Posted on: 04/30/2019 12:14 PM
Hi there

There is no pump(maybe some sort of industrial Lowara or Laing) and mainly seals and gasket which will last water temperatures higher than 60-65°C and therefore be scared of Acrylic is no point

I have used several blocks which have been fully acrylic and no issues although they're prone to cracking if you over tightening the fittings which you shouldn't do, by hand is more than enough, you don't need to use any tools

Hope this helps

Thanks, Jura
Thank you. I am well aware of how acrylic works and its temp limits. To have a temp rating on there for that and being that high is pretty much a joke.

55C will see some serious issues arise in your acrylic. I personally do not my coolant go over 30-35 if that. Then again with as many RADs as I have I wouldn't expect anything "more...."

I've personally had three different triple Lian Li pump tops fail from XSPC due to manufacturer issues upon creation. Just one more thing about acrylic and if it's not "perfect" it will fail eventually.

POM ACYTAL FTW.....

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