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Thread: a fan

  1. #1
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    artemis8's Avatar
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    a fan

    My computer seems so hot. Do people usually buy extra fans for their crunching computers?





  2. #2
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    Re: a fan

    Quote Originally Posted by artemis8 View Post
    My computer seems so hot. Do people usually buy extra fans for their crunching computers?
    Aye, most prebuilt computers were not built with intentions of 24/7 max usage specially if you added a video card. I would sugest any cruncher to download temp software to monitor how things are going to avoid burning up there computers.

    For GPU
    Afterburner http://event.msi.com/vga/afterburner/download.htm
    GPUZ http://www.techpowerup.com/gpuz/

    For CPU
    RealTemp (has an alarm for max temps) http://www.techpowerup.com/realtemp/

    For CPU & GPU & Motherboard
    CPUID HWMonitor http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html

    There are others but these are the main ones i personaly use.


  3. #3
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    Re: a fan

    Yes! Absolutely. Can you tell me the make and model of your case and then what fans you already have in there? I and some of the others may have a few spares even...depends on what size of fan(s) you need.

  4. #4
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    Re: a fan

    THE FAN


    The DUKE fans


    Fans that have a computer also


    My computer with no fans


    The song of a crunching computer

    CRAZY DUKE are-you-insane.jpg

  5. #5
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    Re: a fan

    Quote Originally Posted by coronicus View Post
    Aye, most prebuilt computers were not built with intentions of 24/7 max usage specially if you added a video card. I would sugest any cruncher to download temp software to monitor how things are going to avoid burning up there computers.

    For GPU
    Afterburner http://event.msi.com/vga/afterburner/download.htm
    GPUZ http://www.techpowerup.com/gpuz/

    For CPU
    RealTemp (has an alarm for max temps) http://www.techpowerup.com/realtemp/

    For CPU & GPU & Motherboard
    CPUID HWMonitor http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html

    There are others but these are the main ones i personally use.
    Thanks, coronicus, I had a desktop gadget (GPU Meter) that told me my gpu was at about 162-172 F. My cpu I downloaded real temp like you suggested and it's at 171-176 F. But I am pretty sure it has gotten hotter than that. We just turned on our a/c yesterday. It's nice to know for sure what temp they are at. I just don't know what's an 'unsafe' temp.





  6. #6
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    Re: a fan

    Quote Originally Posted by Duke of Buckingham View Post
    [CENTER]THE FAN
    I am not sure I have room for that fan in my little study





  7. #7
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    Re: a fan

    What CPU and GPU so you have in there? We can look up the safe temp threshold on a specs page. High 80s °C for GPU is a safe level....I personally don't like them to hit 90°C or above, although you would have to push it over 100°C to kill it.

    CPU - AMD I don't like my X6 to go anywhere over 60°C under 100% load. Mid 50s is better.
    Intel - depends on the chip - the new S.B. is rated quite high, and Dad's crunches in the mid 70s or so just perfect.

  8. #8
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    Re: a fan

    Often, it isn't just the fan but also the heat sink that needs to be upgraded. Many aftermarket heat sinks can lower the CPU temps by 10 or even 20 degrees Celsius. That's a lot. For a while now, CPUs will slow themselves down or even shut down if they get too hot. But having a good heat sink and fan you can keep it running at top speed. You can spend as little as $25 for an aftermarket heat sink and fan for the CPU. For under $50 you can get a pretty decent one (dual 120mm fans doing a push-pull through the heat sink -- that is if you case is large/wide enough for something that size.)

    Once the heat has been taken away from the CPU, it then needs case fans to bring cool air into the case and force the hot air out. Aftermarket cases often have better air flow than the standard Dell, Gateway, etc. cases. Even a $40 case will be a huge step up. As far as case fans go, bigger is usually better because they move more air at the same RPMs and, if you have enough, can run at lower RPMs which means it runs quieter and they potentially last longer.

    Or, by using a water cooled setup, you can skip the extra case fans. The cheaper ones will work better than the stock CPU cooler and the high end one works really well even if overclocking the CPU to faster speeds. Then again, you need a case that has the room to mount it. Here's a pretty good comparison of several options from $60 to $130 that would be an all-in-one solution:

    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...ng,3084-8.html

    Don't want to spend much if anything? If it is a mini tower, just take the cover off the case and set a box fan pointed right at it a foot or two away. You can always create your own Frankenstein case as well. I have a small mini-tower that had no room for additional case fans so I cut two holes in side and mounted two 120mm fans on the outside of the case - one to blow cool air directly on the GPU and the other on the CPU. I did splurge and get fans with wire guards on them just in case the cat got too curious.
    Spring 2008 Race: (1st Place)

  9. #9
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    Re: a fan

    Im very concerned with your CPU temps 60c older intel 70c newer intel, not sure on the amd side.. you have to start watching closely depending on which intel series you have with those high of temps. I would release one of the cores on the cpu till you can get some fans to help cool em off i would start with the casing fan if you have more room to add some just lowering the air temps inside the casing should lower the cpu and gpu temps and casing fans are much cheaper and less complicated then getting a new heatsink/fan for the cpu. Have to remember those gpu will dump heat inside the casing.. good way to test it is stop gpu crunching wait an hour or so and see what you cpu temps are if there is a huge dif in temps then run out and get some casing fans..


  10. #10
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    Re: a fan

    Sorry to add more but one thing many owners forget is to clean their CPU & GPU coolers. Canned air works great for this. You can use a vacuum cleaner but you need to be very careful. Adding fan filters to any intake fans will also help to keep dust out of the case. The filters need to vacuumed at regular intervals but that is easier then having to clean the inside of your computer.

    The best AMD/Intel CPU cooler for under $25 dollars is the Cooler Master Hyper 212+. Its only limitation is it won't fit in some much older narrow ATX cases or any "Slim" ATX cases.

    Best price: Geeks.com - $14.99 +S/H (Link)

    Newegg installation video ---> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1DGR...layer_embedded


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