On Son, 2004-02-01 at 17:25, Antonio Rodriguez wrote: > > Your hints will be welcome
Ok.... :) Well, the general layout would be clear at a glance if I had a digicam. I made three big holes into the side of my case, close to the bottom. Here's where the fans blow air into the case. The fans don't need to be special, really. But one should have a tacho line to connect to your mobo. Then I made a simple wooden frame onto the outside of the side panel, and that's the place where I attach the 'dust filter' (actually the filter is meant for ... ahm... 'air exhaust in kitchen, above cooking station'). The idea was if the filter surface is bigger, so the fan's wouldn't go full throttle just to overcome the filter's air resistance. Some stab at ASCII art (cough): | | __________| |###WOOD###| -- | | | case> | | | ~ ~ ~ ~ | | | | | <dust | | |FAN-> | <fil- FAN-> | FAN-> | <ter FAN-> | FAN-> | FAN-> | FAN-> | |FAN-> |__________| |###WOOD###| ------------ Thus, the filter has a large surface (40x50cm) and there is some distance between the filter and the actual air inlet. I had to place an upright wine cork into the center of the filter, otherwise it would be drawn to the case. It looks ugly; however, I've got it under the desk with the modyfied side to the wall. It also wasn't easy to make the holes; if I had do it again, I'd give the job to a blacksmith or whoever. Now the tricks... you've got to make sure that the PS fan won't shove more air out than the case fans draw in; otherwise, you'd still get some amount of unfiltered air into the case. I did so by going over the power supply as well: ^^^ _____________ __FAN________ <-|fan | | | <-|fan before| | after | <-|fan | | | ------------- ------------- Yes, the PS actually spills it's hot air back into the case. You als need to close most of the air inlets and other holes in the lower half of your case. I found out that the air flow would pass straight through the case and leave it on the other side, with little fresh air reaching the PS and drives in the upper half. Before I did so, I had a super-cool mobo and harddisks, with the CD-Rs and power supply revolving the same air over and over again. Now the cool air is forced up, and the hot air pushed out. Finally, the ciruitry to make your fans temperature-controlled. Unfortunately, I have not yet found a satisfying solution: all cicuits have too large a temperature span. They regulate from barely moving to full throttle over a range of 60 C -- that's far too much for a computer. Ideally, it would start spinning at ~15 C (a temperature I hardly expect to ever have in my office) and would go full speed at 40 C (which many hardware manufacturers name as safe maximum). If somebody knows hot to build such a beast, please let me know. Things being as they are, I frequently have to recalibrate my setup according to the current climate. It's a good idea to have the cicuit outside of the case, so you can calibrate and readjust without disturbing the setup. cu, Schnobs -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]