glend
14-03-2015, 08:34 AM
I have been looking into options for cooling my DSLR cold finger setup - other than cooler boxes/TECs, fans units and heat sinks attached to the camera. One option that looks feasible is to relocate all the heat exhange activity by using a PC CPU liquid cooler to cool the cold finger via an off camera heat sink/fan/TEC unit. All you would have on the camera would be the CPU puck unit attached to the end of the cold finger, and its two tubes that carry the coolant to the heat exchanger unit (which could be a ground box, pier mount, or hang in the middle of the tripod). Traditionally these CPU coolers use water and are restricted to ambient temps but there are a number of people now replacing the water coolant with glycol (coolant) and incorporating a TEC to drive CPU temps down to 0C. Most of these CPU cooling units seem to operate on 12V.
Here is an example of one of the many CPU cooler units available on the market that could be used:
http://www.corsair.com/en-au/hydro-series-h75-liquid-cpu-cooler
Here is a good link that explains how it goes together (keep in mind this guy was building a system for a rack based computer so small footprint was not a consideration but the concepts are the same).
http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/282844-29-peltier-water-cooling
Here is an example of one of the many CPU cooler units available on the market that could be used:
http://www.corsair.com/en-au/hydro-series-h75-liquid-cpu-cooler
Here is a good link that explains how it goes together (keep in mind this guy was building a system for a rack based computer so small footprint was not a consideration but the concepts are the same).
http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/282844-29-peltier-water-cooling