Cooling - Case Fan

  1. #1
    penguinpaul is offline Dedicated Member

    Cooling - Case Fan

    Hi,

    I've recently been monitoring the temperature on one of the machines in the office/study thing. Fujitsu Siemens, only a P4 HT, its a 3.06ghz, running Xp. The cpu temps have been about 65 idle, and it doesnt seem to measure the temp past 70 when its under load.

    The case temp was about 49, and the hds were about the same, so I've gone and got an akasa 80mm fan for the case. The mobo wont power a case fan, so I'm using the 4 to 3 pin molex adaptor. The case temp is now around 30 - 35 ish, much better. But I'm not sure which way the fan should be blowing. Its blowing outwards at the moment, which I *think* my machine does.. Is this the best way for the air?? Its the machine with 3 blue LEDs on the front, which are also small vents.
    I used compressed air and the hoover on the very dusty heatsink for the CPU and i think thats helped loads.. But anyway, if anyone could help with me with the airflow of the CPU fan it would be much appreciated

    thanks,
    Paul


  2. #2
    dobhar is offline Super Moderator
    Hi penguinpaul...

    I have mine setup per this diagram...
    Keeping Your Computer's Case Cool - An Internal Airflow Strategy - CPUs, Boards & Components by ExtremeTech

    I have 2 small case fans in the front and one large case fan in the back...plus the PSU fan...this works for me.

    Some other "Google" hits on the subject...
    computer air flow diagram - Google Search

  3. #3
    penguinpaul is offline Dedicated Member
    hey thanks man

    thats good, i'll try and get some front fans as well

    -Paul

  4. #4
    Digerati is offline Senior Quiquagenarian
    Yeah, you generally want unrestricted front to back air flow. Also bigger fans move more air at lower RPM - this is good because lower RPMs equal less noise. So if your case supports 92mm or 120mm fans, that's better.

    Also, if you have flat ribbon cables for any hard or floppy drives, you could replace them with round cables. These restrict air much less, come in various lengths, and different colors, which is nice when tracing cables in a crowded box.

  5. #5
    penguinpaul is offline Dedicated Member
    yeh, i had a 90 but i had to buy an 80, the case only supported an 80..
    because the mobo has no case fan output, im powering off a molex, so its running flat out (2500 rpm). Is this ok, or should I try and get some kind of voltage regulator??? I was just wondering if its very efficient at 2500RPM or not..

    Thanks,
    Paul

  6. #6
    Digerati is offline Senior Quiquagenarian
    because the mobo has no case fan output, im powering off a molex, so its running flat out (2500 rpm). Is this ok, or should I try and get some kind of voltage regulator???
    That is perfectly fine - that's how all fans used to be powered. And since it is running full speed, it is cooling better. The ONLY reason to use speed controls on fans is to control noise - if you got good ball-bearing fans, noise should not be bad.

  7. #7
    penguinpaul is offline Dedicated Member
    brushless so yeh... its alright sound wise.. its not me who uses it anyway
    my mum and my sister, and theyre not fussy

    time to order an arctic cooling alpine 7 GT for it

  8. #8
    Digitalis D-A-L Guest
    I have a desktop now, but I had a lappie once & there were overheating problems, I solved it by getting a twin fan cooling unit that a laptop stands on, cheap too, at £14.99!

  9. #9
    penguinpaul is offline Dedicated Member
    Do they actually work then??? Cos my old lappy gets very very hot and then it BSODs.. might be worth getting one

    also, I couldnt get an Alpine 7 for the fujitsu, turns out its a 478 not a 775

    got a thermaltake one coming tho

  10. #10
    Digitalis D-A-L Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by penguinpaul View Post
    Do they actually work then??? Cos my old lappy gets very very hot and then it BSODs.. might be worth getting one

    also, I couldnt get an Alpine 7 for the fujitsu, turns out its a 478 not a 775

    got a thermaltake one coming tho
    They certainly do, although I live in England where it rarely gets above 65c, where I had the lap, in the summer, It'd top 80c quite often,
    Last edited by Digitalis; 20-02-2009 at 03:51 PM.

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