CPU Cooling

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

Globalti

Legendary Member
I would fit an extractor in the top of the cupboard; you'll be able to pick up a computer fan at Maplins for small money. Is the heat actually affecting the processing speed?
 
Sort the cupboard temps out. Cooling is all relative to the ambient temperatures. You can't cool below ambient without hideously expensive sub ambient cooling equipment.

Once you can control the cupboard temps with ventilation. Then check that your case is clean. Fans and heat sinks are free of dust etc.


Alternatively you could pull it out of the cupboard and look at water cooling. You will still have fans running for the radiators but at much lower rpm than traditional cooling.
 

MontyVeda

a short-tempered ill-controlled small-minded troll
My PC was as noisy as feck at times. Swapped the SATA disc drive for an SSD and it's been as quiet as a mouse ever since. This has led me to believe that the old disc drive was the main source of heat inside the box.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Have you ever seen the heat extractor around the chip in a laptop? It's a rather crude chunk of copper curled around the chip and leading out to a radiator.
 

raleighnut

Legendary Member
[QUOTE 4470153, member: 9609"]I have plenty of old fans from older cases., and yes I was thinking blowing it out of the top would be better than blowing in the bottom (but don't know why)

I don't think it has been affect processing speed (not really sure though) but going over a 100c seems pretty excessive, I understand about 70 should be the max[/QUOTE]
Sucking hot air out is always going to be more efficient than blowing ambient air in, as for positioning as long as the vents are higher than the heat source they'll be fine.
 

Andy_R

Hard of hearing..I said Herd of Herring..oh FFS..
Location
County Durham
You might want to think about a separate graphics card, with it's own cooling, as you're probably overtaxing what is a fairly low end m/board
 
Last edited:

Brains

Legendary Member
Location
Greenwich
Back in the early 1990's we designed a server, it had 3 PSU's and we had all sorts of heat issues.
We resolved this by replacing the bottom with a tray of 8 x 4" fans and an offset grill at the top
It worked on the chimney venturi effect, and solved the heating issues instantly
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimney
It did however mean that the server bore more than a passing resemblance to a stove.
 

Similar threads

Top Bottom