Added: 1 year ago
From: overclockjames
Views: 13,894
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (17)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • cool ive had a high out 12" on my computer runing off a 13A 12v power supply.when i was testing it i got my finger cought in the blades and about got it cut off.VERY sharp blades but a rediculus amount of air flow 3TB hard drive 3.7ghz processor 8gb of ram 2X 4gb sticks.dont use it any more, upgraded to a lap top

  • What power supply do I need to run this?

    I have a graphics card and a few fans running. but I can take most of the fans out if I'm gonna use this...

    My power supply is 730V

  • the car fan pulls a bit over 100A when starting it and it pulls about 35-40A on its full speed.makes you think about the electricity bill and it makes ridiculously loud noise and when its on full speed and if you dont have it attached to your pc case well,it can easily pull itself off from the case or blow all the stuff in the pc apart or away or so.

  • I wanna fit this into my laptop ;D

  • @TmRCng I know what you're going through.. :P

  • Why not just hook up air conditioning to your pc? =) Not only can you cool the air for summer time, but you can also dry and filter it.

  • @TheCrazyFinn Assuming the air has more than 0% of relative humidity, if something is cooler than the the ambient air, water will start to condense on it. Especially metal. And it's not good for a computer.

  • @armorfid Like I said, air conditioners can also dry the air. Also, the condensation would occur inside the air conditioning unit, not the PC.

  • @TheCrazyFinn Air conditioners do naturally acts as dehumidifiers, but not at 100% efficiency. You can't filter out all the humidity inside a room at once.

    For example, a film of condensation forms on my air conditioner exhaust's directional blades when running in dehumidify mode.

    It's one of the reasons you have to tighly seal a Peltier element for CPU cooling, or the CPU's surroundings will be flooded in no time.

  • @TheCrazyFinn cool air exhaust, forgot to specify.

  • @armorfid Anyways, moisture from cool air doesn't condense on warm surfaces. So moisture from the cool air coming from the AC system wouldn't condence on the warm PC components.

  • @TheCrazyFinn Not on the warm components, but anything that the AC is able to cool down enough will condense water, such as the casing.

  • @armorfid Condensation only occurs when warmer air comes to contact with cooler components. AC can't cool the components to a lower temperature than the air it expels. If all the air passing through the system comes from the AC, there will be no condensation inside the PC. Outside may be a different story... ;)

  • @TheCrazyFinn Condensation occurs when a component is at any lower temperature than the ambient air, and the air an AC expells is well below that. And I've never seen a conventional case that is airtight, so allows ambient air to penetrate it.

    Anyway, I think an AC is too loud for viable use as everyday computer cooling. The sound gets quite annoying after a moment, and I have to turn mine off when watching videos because I can't hear anything.

  • think its time to just bite the bullet and get liquid cooling

  • i tried to google search this and found out that you are the only one to do this to a pc id have it built into one of the side panels

  • My God! It's beautiful!!

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more