I got to thinking today about ways I could cool down the water in my liquid cooling system, effectively, something that isn't the size of a refrigerator and most of all, cheap. So I started looking around and stumbled across aquarium chillers, namely the ones made for say a 10 gallon tank. Now the water in the reserator is only about 1.25 liters so I'm worried about possible freezing since it says the chiller can get things to 20 degrees. But, the anti-corrosion stuff mixed with the water says it's freezing point is -9C. Will this lower the freezing point of the water as well? I could really see this working seeing as it requires a 1.25 inch wide hole. And it just so happens the opening on the reserator is that size..exactly. Any thoughts/ flaws in the way I'm looking at this?
http://www.coolworksinc.com/iceprobe_aq ... hiller.htm
Edit: The physics side of me activated and remembered heat always transfers to cold, so I dont think it would freeze regardless. Assuming it fits any other complications you guys see?