Quote:
Just like Neko said; airflow is crucial. Today the
processor is not the real problem - If you have an
x86 you know you must have proper cooling. What
many people forget are the harddrives. Drives today
are running at up to 50 'C when working. Imagine
that temp all day long, 24 hours a day. People
insert minimal cooling in their desktops and complain
about harddrives failing?..
Indeed.
The best heatsink in the world is AIR
I will let you all in to a little dirty secret of ours which is that we changed the ODW case without testing it first. The white pearl chassis we now use was picked because of it's clicky drive door (that doesn't fall off in transit), smaller dimensions, not-so-expandable drive bays (you can't install a second optical or hard disk.. floppy bay stuff only. But we plan to fill it with a standard and internal smart card reader at some point anyway) it kind of seemed like a compromise for a less "cool" case but one that was worth making. We also thought we'd be able to get it in black.
What we found when we were building them to order is that the power supply was LOUD. We made an experiment to cut the PSU fan and see if it would make much difference; and it practically didn't. The PSU gets boiling hot but the system is really stable even in bad air conditioning. This is where Jason (Linux User & Developer Magazine) got the idea from, so you can blame me
- a compromise I thought would be to connect the chassis fan and use that to draw air out, and this cooled the system down considerably with VERY little noise.
Fortunately our case supplier changed the PSU on us about 4 weeks ago. It now has a SATA connector which is making us giggle with joy, and a fan which is quieter than the CPU fan on the G4 card (and by that I mean both the version with integrated fan, and the one with the top-mounted fan).
Therefore there are now 3 kinds of ODW in the world - ones with AOpen blue/grey cases, ones with the beige case with a loud PSU and ones with a beige case with a quiet PSU. AOpen users are fine. The second set of beige ODW users are fine.
If users have the loud PSU version and are DESPERATE for lower noise, what I UNOFFICIALLY suggest is to follow the suggestions above and add a 70 or 80 ohm resistor (forgive me I don't recall the correct series numbers right now, my physics classes were all of 8 years ago). Also connect the chassis fan (if you have a modern Pegasos II it will connect it's fan to the motherboard, so buy an adapter) because if you don't, your PSU will flood the case with hot, still air, and your drives will start to bake. You HAVE to connect the chassis fan. It's to do with air pressure, and the way these cases are designed to draw in "new air".
It's that simple
Anyway this is all UNOFFICIAL and you will void your warranty on the case and PSU if you mess around with it, and if your CPU card burns we may giggle at you for a while before sending you a replacement. Be warned, be wary, but have fun
--
Matt Sealey
Genesi, Manager, Developer Relations