On Thu, 26 Jun 2003 00:42:36 +0200, Halfgaar <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:
>Funny you should mention "a fanned sink like on the northbridge". My
>northbridge only has a sink and it gets finger-burning hot. It doesn't seem
>OK to me, but it's what MSI decided to do.
>And you're right about the mislabling, the fan labels were also swapped. So
>I guess your right about my systemtemp sensor too.
My Turbo2 also had only the tiny 'sink, but since it sits on the board
at a somewhat 45 degree angle, it allowed a few slow 60mm fan to be
mounted diagonally across half of a traditional 40-50mm 'sink... half
the reason I changed the 'sink was so I had a nice location to mount
the fan for cooling the voltage regulator/capacitor area to the left.
I was using a relatively low-CFM CPU heatsink fan so a bit of extra,
directed airflow did seem to help.
Hmmm, I just realized something, I've been getting my MSI motherboad's
names mixed-up... I was thinking of a K7T266 Pro2 half the time, and
the other half I was thinking about a K7T Turbo2 (I've had both). The
Turbo2 already had heatsinks on the voltage regulators from the
factory, and was unusual in that it used a 12V P4 connector for CPU
power. What I previously described about "draping a fan" to cool the
reguloators/caps, was on the K7T266 board. On the K7TTurbo2 I cooled
the northbridge passively, used 1/3 of an old P2 Katmai heatsink, cut
off.. was one of those OEM-passive-type with really tall tines. It
must've done well enough, I recally that the board was stable over
150MHz FSB, around which point the USB ports crapped out.
>> I wouldn't worry about those temps, they seem fine, but you might take
>> note of the temps on the capacitors next to the row of voltage
>> regulators onboard (touch-test them). If they're more than slightly
>> warm expect them to have reduced lifespan. When I got my Turbo2 I put
>> heatsinks on the regulators, a socket 7 'sink on the northbridge, then
>> sort of "draped" the fan half on the northbridge 'sink and half
>> hanging off to the left of it, to move air through the 'sinks for the
>> regulators. You may not need to do this, I was taking precautionary
>> measures prior to highly overclocking a Palomino Athlon in a small
>> case.
>
>At least two caps on my board get very warm, not finger-burning, but still
>quite warmer than the rest.
I do recall some people reporting that a couple of caps right above
the AGP slot were prone to failure, the one in the middle and the
other next to the memory slots, right below the northbridge.
>
>> Putting a second fan on the power supply should be sufficient to keep
>> the top of the case cool, providing there's an adequate air inlet.
>
>Intake air is supplied by a 12 cm fan at 1300 RPM, not very very much, but I
>don't think that's going to be a problem.
>
>If you don't mind (and if you do
), I'll answer some questions of your
>other reply here as well:
>
>My 300W powerman PSU has a few small inlet slots at the back and the side
>and many of them are covered by components inside. I think what I must do
>is get myself a powerfull PSU really built for low noise but still produce
>a good airflow, like the one in my other computer I talked about. This PSU
>is also labelled as "low noise" but the only reason for that seems that it
>has a fanspeed controller which lets the fan spin faster if it's hotter.
>Not that it helps, because it only slows down the fan when the PSU is
>practicly freezing.
>
>About the livespan of my hardware, I care about long livespans. I also make
>sure I don't turn my computers or other electronic devices on and off many
>times, to prevent power surge damage.
>But I also like low-noise. I think I have to mix the two in this case.
>
>And about the papst, I must say that I don't know what bearing it has. I had
>thought a ball bearing, because in my experience only very cheap fans use
>sleeves, but you're making me doubt.
>
>Halfgaar
Here's a Pabst spec sheet that seems to indicate sleeve bearings:
http://www.papst.de/pdf_dat_e/S17gb.pdf
There are decent fans that use sleeve bearings like Pabst and Panaflo,
but it is true that often a sleeve bearing is a sign of a cheap/junk
fan. Pabst and Panaflo fans have pretty good bearings that'll last
near as long at room temps, in a vertical mounting position, but even
so an equivalent quality dual-ball-bearing fan will last a lot longer
in high-heat environments. The main thing is to lube the
sleeve-bearing before it dries out and starts grinding into dust,
getting noisey.
Dave