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Maybe instead of the slider changing ice consumption it would change flow speed, slower flow speed means more heat removed for less power from the pumps, but higher risk of water vaporizing into steam and bowing up.
Edit: adding to that: different coolants maybe even things like aluminum ingots can be used, say the guy want to cool a reactor at over 1000degrees, if they send in water the cooling system will immediately blow up, but if they send in aluminum first, then wait until temperature drops for a bit, send in something else that doesn’t vaporize at the temperature but still pushes out the aluminum, they may survive. Maybe when temperature is too low, the coolant freezes inside the pipe, and if the coolant happens to be water then the pipe pops because water expands into ice. If it’s aluminum, the pipe becomes permanently unusable because it’s welded shut with solid aluminum, in which case they need to replace it or risk their stuff overheating.
Edit: I forgot about gravity for a moment. Under gravity, you get to evaporate things to cool other things. There’s something called thermal syphon, it basically uses the fact that water after changing phase to gas becomes less dense, let’s the stuff evaporate cool (using a fan) and recollect in a closed cycle. Only works when right side up though.