I thought I asked you not to mention the disco ball...
It was going to be a surprise.
I thought I asked you not to mention the disco ball...
It was going to be a surprise.
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
hehehe the ongoing saga, i have lights clocker(i do respect the fact that EVERYONE has thier own opinions about this) i use them for essientail componets ie water pump and radiater fans etc... just so that i can at a glance be sure that all i s working well!!
Also i have noticed the Female fan thingy i think it is universil, (the way jumpers work suggets it)
ie you woundn't see an L shaped jumper...
And as for the PSU it was only a suggestion, and i personally don't like it, but i am doing what it does at the start without the 1 hole, i will have it so that you plug into the PSU like the way the power to the wall plugs in on the back... i figure this could cause it to be al little more (just as many as i need) sorta thing... (witha 500 watt psu... i don't need all the cables)
as for the sleeving i wouldn't mind having it done as wel as they do it..
hehehehe rock on clocker (get the diso ball preped robin, and i will get in the beefed up car that ways way too much to realisticly handle the way it does...)
I actually decided to try the Stock hsf, since you speak so highly of it clocker.
I was kinda ifiy on the matter, because, I just didn't know, since I'm ocing, whether I should trust my computer to a stock hsf.
Anyway, with the Coolermaster CPU cooler (wasn't the greatest hsf, but I thought it'd be better than the stock hsf)
I was getting around 48- 50 at full load. And it was at idle around 36 or so. Now, since I've changed to the stock hsf I'm actually getting lower temps. Around 43-46 at full load and still staying around 36 at idle. I can't really believe the temp lowered with stock hsf. Guess AMD stock hsf, does have something to say for it after all.
As I told you before I ordered the Jet 7, but I canceled the order, I've decided I'm going with water cooling, although, I would like to have a Mach . Though, I'm going to wait until after Christmas, just because, I guess Christmas presents for my family and friends should come before my obsession with my PC, but it’s hard not to go ahead and do it.
http://www.crazypc.com/Merchant2/merchant....t_Code=PV3-8130
So Cool, Even though I'd like to see those kind of temps, My better judgement says, just go with water cooling.
"Where did he go, George, Where did he go?"
WTF just happened?
Where did the rest of this topic go?
Edit: Aha! moving servers are we?
Well crap, all that hard work for nothing....
VB, results were very similar no matter which way the fans blew. If anything, just a wee bit worse with your preference. If I thought that they would stay around, I'd repost the pics, but it's a real pain as I'd have to reupload them as well, so maybe not yet...
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
i think you need to read here clocker.Originally posted by clocker@23 November 2003 - 17:18
WTF just happened?
Where did the rest of this topic go?
http://klboard.ath.cx/index.php?showtopic=83524
Yeah we lost some of our posts. Oh well...
No need to reupload them. Just save the links.
Okay, I'll try this again...
New HS fan with the two case fans blowing in...
and the test results...
Same setup except , as per VBod, the case fans have been reversed..
During the fan flip I opened a window and cooled off the case interior. As the second burn-in test was running the interior case temp was .5 degC higher than the first test.
So what do you think 1234?
To me, the results are, at best, tipped slightly in favor of blowing in.
At worst, it's a wash I think.
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
It's good enough for me. I think it was worth trying.
Out of idle curiousity, does anyone know where the motherboard temp is taken from?
Is it possible to artificially skew the mobo temps by having a fan blowing directly on the sensor?
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
Hmmm good question. I think it's the LMxxxx chip at the right of the CPU socket.
I'm really not sure about that.
http://www.national.com/appinfo/tempsensors/
Bookmarks