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Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 1:53 am
by Ganool
Yup... I'm getting an extra Pulsar I-card in addition to my Pulsar II-card. AND if I'm really lucky I'm getting a dead-cheap Luna II as well.
This means: new adventures in the installation-jungle.
Any tips to avoid the worst headaches?
How important is cooling? Is it a good idea to add a chassi-fan to my system? I'd rather not as I want to keep the noise level down.
Cheers,
Carl.
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 2:52 am
by garyb
cooling is the most likely problem.you can try it w/o a fan....if you have a large well-ventilated case,you might be o.k..
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 5:52 am
by borg
i have a pulsar II and two pulsar I cards in my G3, and so far no problems... i think
you'll love the power!
_________________
andy
<FONT SIZE="-2"> the lunatics are in the hall </FONT>
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: borg on 2002-09-26 06:53 ]</font>
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 7:54 am
by at0m
I expect no heat problems. I have 21 DSP and 2 P3's.
Silent 60mm fan on each CPU.
Replaced the standard PSU fan with a silent (80mm) one. It's assisted by a 2nd 80mm fan, in a hole on the casing's air inlet -front bottom. PSU fan extracts, case fan sucks air into the case.
As I used silent fans and HD, it's a very quiet machine. Often when I come home I have to look at the numlock to see if it's running or not.
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 12:15 pm
by Ganool
On 2002-09-26 08:54, at0mic wrote:
I expect no heat problems. I have 21 DSP and 2 P3's.
Wow!
Silent 60mm fan on each CPU.
Replaced the standard PSU fan with a silent (80mm) one. It's assisted by a 2nd 80mm fan, in a hole on the casing's air inlet -front bottom. PSU fan extracts, case fan sucks air into the case.
As I used silent fans and HD, it's a very quiet machine. Often when I come home I have to look at the numlock to see if it's running or not.
Thanks for you detailed description. Very interesting indeed. The thing is that I don't want to put more fans in my machine. Got a P4 with a Zalman fan running at lowest speed. I also got a Zalman PSU - it's very quiet when running at 1000 rpm, but after 10 minutes the speed goes up to 2000 rpm and it's a bit noisy.
Perhaps a - EXTREMELY - quiet chassi fan would solve my PSU _and_ cooling of CW cards?
Carl.
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 12:27 pm
by at0m
You won't need ONE extremely silent fan. You will then only hear the loudest one
I ordered 60mm (cpu) and 80mm
http://www.pabst.de silent fans, they're 20-25€ each. I replaced all fans in one go -of course if you have quiet fans don't replace those.
For noise/vibration reduction, I put some insulation tape on the edges of touching surfaces of the pc box. I covered big surfaces with 5mm heavy foam.
A cheap way of silencing your current PSU exhaust is to deviate the outgoing air w a cupboard box/tube.
If you have a high tower chassis and only one or two disk drives, you might even not need extra cooling. Disk drives are a great source of heat too.
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 12:34 pm
by garyb
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2002 1:36 pm
by cook
shure

Posted: Fri Sep 27, 2002 12:22 pm
by Ganool
A cheap way of silencing your current PSU exhaust is to deviate the outgoing air w a cupboard box/tube.
Sorry it I'm not getting your point. What do you mean? Like putting something at the back of the computer? Such as a "silencer" ?

Posted: Fri Sep 27, 2002 2:00 pm
by at0m
Yes. It's not huge, but it helps and is free.
On one of my previous machines, there was a cupboard box (w foam inside glued to the walls) on the exhaust. One side had been removed to go over the exhaust, the bottom of the box removed as new exhaust. It reduces airflow a little, so it reduces cooling. Pretty amateuristic, but helps.
Most cost efficient still are silent fans. Big deep fans with low RPM.