A8N-E Chipset Fan Problem

F

ff

I ordered my first 64-bit system about 3 weeks ago from NewEgg. I got the
A8N-E and while I am happy with the performance, I have to wonder about the
nvidia chipset fan. Small and cheap.

Last week when I rebooted, the chipset fan started making an horrible sound.

I had to reboot several times before it started spinning consistently. It
seems to be fine as long as I leave the system running.

I called Asus today and they are sending me what they described as the new
model fan.

Anyone have this replacment fan and know if it is quieter? The little
8000RPM fan is extremely loud. I hear it over the 10k RPM SATA drive.

I was curious if this is a good fix or maybe I should look into a heak sink
or some sort of passive cooling system for this little cheesy fan.

Any similar experiences?

Thanks,

FF
 
M

Mark A

ff said:
I ordered my first 64-bit system about 3 weeks ago from NewEgg. I got the
A8N-E and while I am happy with the performance, I have to wonder about the
nvidia chipset fan. Small and cheap.

Last week when I rebooted, the chipset fan started making an horrible
sound.

I had to reboot several times before it started spinning consistently. It
seems to be fine as long as I leave the system running.

I called Asus today and they are sending me what they described as the new
model fan.

Anyone have this replacment fan and know if it is quieter? The little
8000RPM fan is extremely loud. I hear it over the 10k RPM SATA drive.

I was curious if this is a good fix or maybe I should look into a heak
sink or some sort of passive cooling system for this little cheesy fan.

Any similar experiences?

Thanks,

FF
Before even trying the OEM HSF, I replaced mine with a Zalman ZM-NB47J. I
hooked up a 80 low speed Panaflo fan running at 5V attached to the drive
cage with zip ties (between drive cage and mb) to blow some light air on the
heat sink. Replacing the OEM chipset HSF is a common practice.
http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=19902&start=65
 
F

ff

Before even trying the OEM HSF, I replaced mine with a Zalman ZM-NB47J. I
hooked up a 80 low speed Panaflo fan running at 5V attached to the drive
cage with zip ties (between drive cage and mb) to blow some light air on
the heat sink. Replacing the OEM chipset HSF is a common practice.
http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=19902&start=65

I appreciate your response and solution but I was curious as to if the new
IMPROVED version of the Asus chipset fan was quieter and more reliable?

It must be a common problem since ASUS never even asked for my serial numebr
and said they are well aware of this issues.

This begs the question "Who approved this crappy fan?"
 
M

Mark A

I appreciate your response and solution but I was curious as to if the new
IMPROVED version of the Asus chipset fan was quieter and more reliable?

It must be a common problem since ASUS never even asked for my serial
numebr and said they are well aware of this issues.

This begs the question "Who approved this crappy fan?"
I am sure it is quieter, but not quiet enough. Where I come from
(http://www.silentpcreview.com) all Northbridge chipset HSF's are crappy.
They are very small because "some" PCI cards (or video card) may be extra
long and interfere with a HSF that is too high, so they compensate by
running the fan at very high rpm, which makes way too much noise.

Since the A8N-E is brand new, it obviously is in warranty, so serial number
not needed. But I don't want their replacement fan either.
 

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