John Hewat
June 3rd, 2010, 07:20 PM
Hello all,
I am wondering what people use to monitor the temperature of their computer's components. I've done a few searches and found a few that I just can't seem to get functioning. Speedfan was recommended and I installed it and got all negative temperatures, except for my GPU, which was apparently 280 degrees C (it is a GTX480, so anything's possible). I remember having a program a long time ago that was great and worked with my system which is a dual xeon setup with two physical CPUs. I'd love advice.
Secondly, a practical question. I am considering the fact that my system gets super hot and super loud when it is working hard (GTX480, dual Xeon 5450s at 3.00GHz, 20GB ram on 8 stcks, 6 internal HHDs - it cooks after a while. and the fans sound like a 747.
I am thinking of replacing the CPU fans with these: Noctua (http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=207_23_753&products_id=8354) fans which have been very positively reviewed. But all the reviews are about their noise rather than their cooling effectiveness and whether they beat the stock Xeon coolers. I want to ask whether people recommend them, and whether they think they might actually be detrimental to my system's temperature.
I'll draw a picture to explain:
My case, a Coolermaster Cosmos, has two intake fans at the bottom (one straight onto the PSU), two exhaust fans at the top, and one exhaust fan at the rear. The idea being to create a smooth flow straight up and out the top and back.
If I place the Noctua fans over the CPUs will that encourage almost 100% of the airflow to go straight up over the CPUs and leave little for the Graphics card? Which, as I said, is a super hot GTX 480. As you can see in my amazing drawing, I am worried that the CPU fans of the Noctua might cool the CPU well but detract from the air flow over the 480.
The Cosmos comes with a kind of duct that runs the length of the construction, designed to encourage airflow over the length of the GPU and straight out the rear exhaust fan, but I have not noticed any difference using it or removing it. Can anyone suggest whether it might be a good or bad thing to leave it in/take it out (I may have no choice and have to leave it out as the Noctua's take up more than their fair share of space in there.)
Any ideas?
I am wondering what people use to monitor the temperature of their computer's components. I've done a few searches and found a few that I just can't seem to get functioning. Speedfan was recommended and I installed it and got all negative temperatures, except for my GPU, which was apparently 280 degrees C (it is a GTX480, so anything's possible). I remember having a program a long time ago that was great and worked with my system which is a dual xeon setup with two physical CPUs. I'd love advice.
Secondly, a practical question. I am considering the fact that my system gets super hot and super loud when it is working hard (GTX480, dual Xeon 5450s at 3.00GHz, 20GB ram on 8 stcks, 6 internal HHDs - it cooks after a while. and the fans sound like a 747.
I am thinking of replacing the CPU fans with these: Noctua (http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=207_23_753&products_id=8354) fans which have been very positively reviewed. But all the reviews are about their noise rather than their cooling effectiveness and whether they beat the stock Xeon coolers. I want to ask whether people recommend them, and whether they think they might actually be detrimental to my system's temperature.
I'll draw a picture to explain:
My case, a Coolermaster Cosmos, has two intake fans at the bottom (one straight onto the PSU), two exhaust fans at the top, and one exhaust fan at the rear. The idea being to create a smooth flow straight up and out the top and back.
If I place the Noctua fans over the CPUs will that encourage almost 100% of the airflow to go straight up over the CPUs and leave little for the Graphics card? Which, as I said, is a super hot GTX 480. As you can see in my amazing drawing, I am worried that the CPU fans of the Noctua might cool the CPU well but detract from the air flow over the 480.
The Cosmos comes with a kind of duct that runs the length of the construction, designed to encourage airflow over the length of the GPU and straight out the rear exhaust fan, but I have not noticed any difference using it or removing it. Can anyone suggest whether it might be a good or bad thing to leave it in/take it out (I may have no choice and have to leave it out as the Noctua's take up more than their fair share of space in there.)
Any ideas?