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#11
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Lame Lewis wrote:
All I said is that having more exhaust fans than input fans (or more accurately more exhaust fan CFM than input fan CFM) will cause cool air to flow into the case across drive devices. Read it again, Lane. Same CFM same airflow, Yes, No? [sigh...] Yes, but: If there is more *input* CFM than output CFM, warm internal air will flow *out* over the drive devices. If there is more *output* CFM than input CFM, cool external air will flow *in* over the drive devices. This is why a low dust environment is recommended for this setup. Comprende? |
#12
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If there is more *input* CFM than output CFM, warm internal air will flow
*out* over the drive devices. If there is more *output* CFM than input CFM, cool external air will flow *in* over the drive devices. This is why a low dust environment is recommended for this setup. Comprende? ....Just my two cents... a.) 100CFM in and 200CFM out = 100 CFM air movement (+any leakage into the case, such as vent holes and floppy drive slots, etc.) b.) 200CFM in and 100CFM out = 100CFM air movement (+ same leakage, except it's from the inside out) B is preferable to A because it does not draw dusty air from outside the case through your floppy or CD drive (or any other hole in the case. With B, you can filter the intake air and stop dust from entering the case. What is MORE important is WHERE the air goes once it's inside the case... For example, having a front fan blowing in and then a blowhole on the side of the case over the PCI slots blowing out may rob a lot of airflow from going over the CPU. A good fan scenario is this... Front fan blowing in. Blowhole over CPU blowing in. Rear fan blowing out. Top fan (not many cases have this) blowing out. PSU should blow out. If you can get an air intake over the PCI slots as well, blow it in. This will force the cool air to cross the mainboard from bottom front to upper rear, bringing cool air from the front and side of the case, blowing it over the HDD, PCI cards and CPU, then sucking it out the back, and top (where the hot air will want to go anyhow). Keep the rear of the case away from the wall so you don't end up with heat buildup. |
#13
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William H. Pridgen wrote:
On Tue, 18 Nov 2003 15:45:47 GMT, wrote: What is the best way to set your case fans (3-4 fans) all in or blowing out or somewhere in between AMD recommends having your fan (or fans) blowing out at the back of the case. That pulls the air through the case and over the CPU. I've noticed that cases come set up that way these days, whereas a few years ago they always had a fan in the front blowing in. That's the way I do it. AMD also recomends a PSU that draws it's air from the underside rather than the front. This can have a big effect on CPU cooling. -- Stacey |
#14
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ric wrote:
.... snip ... If there is more *input* CFM than output CFM, warm internal air will flow *out* over the drive devices. If this condition persists the internal pressure will eventually explode the entire system. If there is more *output* CFM than input CFM, cool external air will flow *in* over the drive devices. This is why a low dust environment is recommended for this setup. And if this condition persists you must eventually achieve an ideal interior vacuum. Neither seems to be something to be devoutly wished for :-) The point is that in all cases equilibrium is reached, and air flows from here to there. Both here and there are external. -- Chuck F ) ) Available for consulting/temporary embedded and systems. http://cbfalconer.home.att.net USE worldnet address! |
#15
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"Phrederick" wrote in message news:QGuvb.450314$pl3.175943@pd7tw3no... If there is more *input* CFM than output CFM, warm internal air will flow *out* over the drive devices. If there is more *output* CFM than input CFM, cool external air will flow *in* over the drive devices. This is why a low dust environment is recommended for this setup. Comprende? ...Just my two cents... a.) 100CFM in and 200CFM out = 100 CFM air movement (+any leakage into the case, such as vent holes and floppy drive slots, etc.) b.) 200CFM in and 100CFM out = 100CFM air movement (+ same leakage, except it's from the inside out) B is preferable to A because it does not draw dusty air from outside the case through your floppy or CD drive (or any other hole in the case. With B, you can filter the intake air and stop dust from entering the case. What is MORE important is WHERE the air goes once it's inside the case... For example, having a front fan blowing in and then a blowhole on the side of the case over the PCI slots blowing out may rob a lot of airflow from going over the CPU. A good fan scenario is this... Front fan blowing in. Blowhole over CPU blowing in. Rear fan blowing out. Top fan (not many cases have this) blowing out. PSU should blow out. If you can get an air intake over the PCI slots as well, blow it in. This will force the cool air to cross the mainboard from bottom front to upper rear, bringing cool air from the front and side of the case, blowing it over the HDD, PCI cards and CPU, then sucking it out the back, and top (where the hot air will want to go anyhow). Keep the rear of the case away from the wall so you don't end up with heat buildup. Sounds good to me, most newer cases have this similar scenario, Front fan blowing in over hard drives Back fan blowing in towards CPU PSU fan blowing out, This also results in positive case pressure. Adding another fan blowing in to cool the cards is where many disagree with me because I now have 3 fans blowing in and one blowing out, but as long as there is adequate escape vents for the air I see no problem with it. An additional vent hole can also be cut and a grill put over it but I see no reason to add another exhaust fan as the air will be pushed out anyway. Lane |
#16
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On Sat, 22 Nov 2003 05:44:33 GMT, "Lane Lewis"
wrote: Sounds good to me, most newer cases have this similar scenario, Front fan blowing in over hard drives Back fan blowing in towards CPU PSU fan blowing out, This also results in positive case pressure. Adding another fan blowing in to cool the cards is where many disagree with me because I now have 3 fans blowing in and one blowing out, but as long as there is adequate escape vents for the air I see no problem with it. An additional vent hole can also be cut and a grill put over it but I see no reason to add another exhaust fan as the air will be pushed out anyway. Lane If you want filtered incoming air it's pretty much manditory to have double the fans (or larger sizes) blowing in than out, even if positive pressure isn't obtained or even the goal... typically a fan filter cuts airflow by at least 50%, +- depending on the filter density and area. Dave |
#17
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Sounds good to me, most newer cases have this similar scenario,
Front fan blowing in over hard drives Back fan blowing in towards CPU PSU fan blowing out, You don't want this.. The back fan will cause two negative effects. First, it will suck warmed air from behind the case (where the PSU vents) and secondly it will push away the cool air from the front fan. This also results in positive case pressure. This is the trick... using the front fan blowing in, and two rears blowing out, and still keeping a positive pressure. That's why a blowhole in the side would help, as would two front fans if you can get them. Adding another fan blowing in to cool the cards is where many disagree with me because I now have 3 fans blowing in and one blowing out, but as long as there is adequate escape vents for the air I see no problem with it. Your rear fan should also blow out. Balances things and keeps all the hot air going in one direction. An additional vent hole can also be cut and a grill put over it but I see no reason to add another exhaust fan as the air will be pushed out anyway. Turn your rear fan around and it will be close to balanced. |
#18
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