I did this in July 2021, it's about time I put up the photos and wrote some notes. EKWB is the premier company with waterblock offerings, but good luck finding one that suits the model of card you actually own, especially with the last year and a half of stock shortages. Besides, I'm not rich enough for EK's stuff. You're going to spend at least 300-400 dollars on the waterblock, which is money I'd much rather spend on a faster GPU (if they were in stock lol).
EK isn't getting my 300-400 Aussie dollars because they don't have a block for my card anyway. It's a Gigabyte 3070 Eagle OC, a solid performer by all accounts, and at the right price point. I got lucky because Bykski, a Chinese watercooling brand, does make a block for my model. Sweet!
I did a huge binge on AliExpress and bought way too many bits and bobs, but it was definitely going to work. I ended up getting the block from PLE Computers because it wasn't going to be any cheaper getting it from China, $150 AUD with free shipping. That feels like a fair price to me.
The block is a Bykski N-GV3070GMOC-X, it comes with a backplate and includes an addressable RGB LED strip. It comes with standard perpendicular hose ports, but you can also get an angled replacement that sets the hoses parallel to the card. I did buy this part and tried it for a while, but in the end I had easier hose routing with the standard perpendicular hose fittings.
Ready for surgery. The box includes everything you should need, though the thermal paste there is mine. The black rectangle in the middle is the backplate, you can see how much shorter the card is going to get. The kit includes power cables for wiring directly to the PCB's ports, and squishy thermal pads for the hot components like RAM and VRMs.Remove the heatsink and fans by unscrewing the 8 Phillips head screws (2+2+4), they all take a PH1 Phillips head screwdriverThe parts separate quite easily, just be firm but gentle when you wriggle the fans around to unstick the thermal pads.There's one fan connector on the top edge, and two fan connectors on the PCIe slot edge.Just use a screwdriver to pry the plugs out, they're easy.The two parts, separated.We can see that the long strips of thermal pad lines up with the power circuitry on the left, and the bigger blobs cover the RAM chips. Note the small section up the top (next to the N2042X stamp) that covers a couple of other small chips.A reasonably clear view of the board, and the PCIe power cables just go to... little extension leads?!?Undo these three screws to release the backplate, and the power cable extensions attached to it. They're the same size as the (1) screws on the backplate.The GPU core, cleaned up and ready for new thermal paste application. A shot of the block surface, which will be replacing the heatsink and heatpipe assembly.They give you plenty of thermal pads, these are all the components you'll need to cover. The pads are nice and soft, easy to cut to shape with a knife.Thermal paste applied to the GPU, now we're ready to smash the waterblock onto it.And that's really about all you do - sandwich the card between the block and the backplate, and put in the screws to pull them together. The block is easy to align with the card because there are cutouts for various components on the PCB, so it's pretty much impossible to misalign them.Just look at how much space you save by not having onboard heatsink and fans!
I didn't keep track of how long it took me, but I think it was about 60-90 minutes. It could've definitely been much quicker, but I've never watercooled anything before this PC build, so I was taking it very slowly and documenting everything. It's worth it I reckon, the lack of noise is amazing.