John Hewat
June 2nd, 2009, 06:23 AM
Hi all,
I've been successfully editing on my beautiful super computer for ages now.
And with a move of house coming, I'm thinking of moving the editing suite to the living room.
The machine is:
Two X5450 3.0GHz Xeon Processors
A boiling hot 9800GX2 GPU
A luke-warm 7800GTX GPU
A Supermicro X7DWA-7 MB
A Coolermaster Cosmos Case (with 4 fans)
8 sticks of RAM
6 HDDs
Anyway, the machine does sound like a 747 taking off and moving it to the living room is going to annoy everybody.
Are there options for water cooling the thing?
I have seen these (http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=207_23_753&products_id=3327) heatsinks for the Xeons, but are they a good idea? Is it safe to replace the cooling method of a computer that has so many super-hot components?
The case has in and out holes for water hoses and I'm happy to spend a couple hundred dollars on a water cooling system.
But even then, I suspect that water cooling or those heatsinks would only replace the CPU fans, right? The HDDs will still spin fast and the 4 case fans will still whiz around...
So I'm looking for advice from others who can point me in the right direction.
Final thing I wanted to ask was what is a reasonable temperature for the Xeons to be running at at 100% usage?
Thanks for your help,
-- John.
I've been successfully editing on my beautiful super computer for ages now.
And with a move of house coming, I'm thinking of moving the editing suite to the living room.
The machine is:
Two X5450 3.0GHz Xeon Processors
A boiling hot 9800GX2 GPU
A luke-warm 7800GTX GPU
A Supermicro X7DWA-7 MB
A Coolermaster Cosmos Case (with 4 fans)
8 sticks of RAM
6 HDDs
Anyway, the machine does sound like a 747 taking off and moving it to the living room is going to annoy everybody.
Are there options for water cooling the thing?
I have seen these (http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=207_23_753&products_id=3327) heatsinks for the Xeons, but are they a good idea? Is it safe to replace the cooling method of a computer that has so many super-hot components?
The case has in and out holes for water hoses and I'm happy to spend a couple hundred dollars on a water cooling system.
But even then, I suspect that water cooling or those heatsinks would only replace the CPU fans, right? The HDDs will still spin fast and the 4 case fans will still whiz around...
So I'm looking for advice from others who can point me in the right direction.
Final thing I wanted to ask was what is a reasonable temperature for the Xeons to be running at at 100% usage?
Thanks for your help,
-- John.