i must point out that your wrong with the titling of the 6 pin plug on the newer PSU, its a PCIE power supply and is not for ATX supply but for PCIE graphics cards that require the power. Uptodate PSU's will have atleast 2 of those, and good ones even 4 or more, for SLi setups. Nowadays graphics cards require 2x 6 pin PCIE power supplys.
Like they say below, dude, you go to lengths to do a tutorial, yet your giving the wrong info.
The fans draw air from inside the case. This is to stop what your saying happens, that being the hot air produced by the PSU being pushed into the system case, its not.
The fact newer larger cases let PSU's be bottom mounted with the fan taking cool air from the underside of the case through a grill.
You obviously don't know much about what your doing or talking about as all power supplies move air out from inside the computer case through the power supply and outside of the case, no matter where the fan is placed inside the power supply or where the power supply is placed inside the computer case. If you have a power supply that does different, someone has put the fan in back to front.
The fans on almost any PSU, including the generic psu on this video (u can see the curves of the fan and tell that) - are pushing the hot air from INSIDE the PSU box to OUTSIDE of the computer chasis.
Thanks for the info on power supplies it helped me troubleshoot my computer. 1 new motherboard later fixed it.saved me a lot of money
pingoewear 2 weeks ago
Secondly,
i must point out that your wrong with the titling of the 6 pin plug on the newer PSU, its a PCIE power supply and is not for ATX supply but for PCIE graphics cards that require the power. Uptodate PSU's will have atleast 2 of those, and good ones even 4 or more, for SLi setups. Nowadays graphics cards require 2x 6 pin PCIE power supplys.
64bitbrain 1 month ago
Like they say below, dude, you go to lengths to do a tutorial, yet your giving the wrong info.
The fans draw air from inside the case. This is to stop what your saying happens, that being the hot air produced by the PSU being pushed into the system case, its not.
The fact newer larger cases let PSU's be bottom mounted with the fan taking cool air from the underside of the case through a grill.
64bitbrain 1 month ago
The power supply does not "consume" heat, it "produces" heat.
rockfishgap 1 month ago
You obviously don't know much about what your doing or talking about as all power supplies move air out from inside the computer case through the power supply and outside of the case, no matter where the fan is placed inside the power supply or where the power supply is placed inside the computer case. If you have a power supply that does different, someone has put the fan in back to front.
maccacoffee 2 months ago
The fans on almost any PSU, including the generic psu on this video (u can see the curves of the fan and tell that) - are pushing the hot air from INSIDE the PSU box to OUTSIDE of the computer chasis.
aviweisz 3 months ago
the fan on the aftermarket power supply pulls air from the case and pushes it out through the honeycomb
22teamplayer 4 months ago