Wayne Redpath wrote:
Well....
You have not told us about your mainboard or if this is the old or new E6300 or this case with 80mm fans or your other components....
Lots of difficult stuff for me to find out actually. If it were 5 years ago, I'd be able to rhyme off all that stuff right away. I've dug up what I could, based on leftover boxes and receipts:
Motherboard: passively cooled. It's an ASUS board... and I think even the VRMs have their own sink on em. (could be wrong)
CPU: E6300 (conroe or allendale - can't say for sure, definitely not wolfdale)
Case: coolermaster wavemaster - the three 80mm fans that contribute some to the noise have this serial number "A8025-51CB-3BN-PI"; they spin at about 2250 rpm at 12V. I'd like to just replace them with something like this:
http://www.ncix.com/products/index.php?sku=29201Power supply: coolermaster iGreen 500W. It has a 120x25mm fan right above the CPU and lots of perforations at the back. The airflow design therefore seems relatively good vs those stamped out grille things. But the fan is not very quiet.
I was considering this replacement because it comes close to the 90cfm of the existing fan (from what I can tell) and is similar to fans used in more silent antec power supplies:
http://www.ncix.com/products/index.php?sku=18432Then once I figure out a CPU cooler, I should be set. I may have to get something to dampen vibrations from the two harddrives - but I'll wait and see where things are after the fan upgrades. I can always hack something together out of spare household junk before buying anything special. Unless someone has a specific recommendation.
Wayne Redpath wrote:
=> From your list I would recommend the Scythe Katana, but it would be much better to use a Scythe cooler with a 120mm fan.
I agree. I'd like to use a 120mm cooler, but I am finding it difficult to find one that does not weight or cost a lot. Does such a thing exist?
Wayne Redpath wrote:
=> The PWM fan control can be used to operate the chassis fan which is often more audible than the CPU fan which is inside the chassis.
=> The PWM fan control can operate more than one fan with a Y-adapter.
I may look into this but I think just having a slower, quieter set of 80mm fans would be best. In my opinion, they don't really have to move as much air as they do now - I'm willing to sacrifice a slightly higher internal temp for more silence, but I'll bet that lowering the chassis fan speeds a bit will not make any significant difference in temperature.
PS: as I type this my hardware reports 44C for the CPU while the stock intel fan spins at 2200 rpm. Seems like there's lots of room for improvement there.