More hard drive slots? No problem! Extra vibrations are good for hard drives probably.
Vibrations are movement. Hard drives have moving components. That means that vibrations help read/write speeds!
Movement… increases speed… that sounds right!
So there should be a Disk Vibrator!
I can hear the case vibration in that picture lol
This isn’t a high rpm fan, it’s enough to keep the LSI card cool.
Ohh I was referring to the pic posted behind the “No problem” link in that user’s comment lol
What temps were you seeing before adding the fan?
Hot to touch, and now its warn to touch.
As long as it’s not
error
orcritical
to touch, you should be good.
Improvised but at the same time cared enough to put 4 ties where the bolts would go. Approved.
A coworker of mine was an computer engineer in the early 2000s, but is now a warehouse director. She told me she helped her son build a new pc but it was having heating issues. I asked about fans and she said it only had 2 intake on the front with no exhaust. Told her a local shop that has cheaply priced good fans. She said computers have changed a lot in 20 years. I helped in about a week ago with choosing storage blocks, had no clue nvme even existed.
nvme did kinda feel like it arrived out of nowhere!
You do lose touch rather quickly. I’m a software developer, but I’m not really interested in hardware in my free time, so I honestly didn’t know what exactly to make of nvme until very recently.
The first time I saw an m.2 SSD in real life was about a year ago.
When I was a kid, the first PC I built was a white box with a Pentium 4 HT, which was still a fairly new CPU at the time. It ran hot so I cut a hole in the side of the case, bolted a 120 MM fan in the hole, and covered it with a shroud that I think I must have fabricated with Aluminum facia.
It didn’t look pretty but it worked. And it kept my bedroom toasty in the winter.
I mean, that’s essentially how my first tower PC was cooled. Bought it as a complete PC and the cooling was a blower style fan that sucked cool air through vents on the side via a plastic shroud.
And it was also one of the wonderful pentium 4 space heaters with incidental compute.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters More Letters PCIe Peripheral Component Interconnect Express SATA Serial AT Attachment interface for mass storage SSD Solid State Drive mass storage
3 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 13 acronyms.
[Thread #156 for this sub, first seen 22nd Sep 2023, 20:35] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
Gotta love a good TLA.
I’d say it was the fan that solved the overheating problem, not the zip ties.
I tried just the fan on it’s own, but gravity always left it sat at the bottem of my case.
Zipties and brown for life.
Gotta give it to noctua for making brown cool
deleted by creator
You’re ugly. Brown for life.
You can ditch the first sentence there.
Zip ties is always the solution. Period.Except if some string and paperclip is enough.
Are they though?
Are you a denier of the Zip?! HERETIC!
I am a denier of the grammar errors.
Which ones in particular?
Zip ties is.
We both is frustrated, but I are sure we overcame it.
Zip ties are the answer.
Zip ties the new duct tape?
If I could find a internal server fan smaller then 20x20mm. I’d stick one next to my 1U CPU Cooler. But for some reason I can’t find one. Needs to be smaller then 20x20 because it would sit on top of the motherboard in a closed 1U server rack frame.
There are centrifugal fans that are quite flat but they intake airflow from a different axis they exhaust it from. Could still work
Hmm I’ve gotta look into that, It’s Dell Poweredge R410 Server: looks like this: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/er4AAOSwNDVfyTuN/s-l1600.jpg.
It would need to fit inbetween two heat sinks pretty snug.
Yeah, sadly a lot of server hardware is designed for high air-flow rack-mounted cases and doesn’t deal so well with normal ventilation somewhat optimized to reduce noise. Especially PCIe ethernet cards seem to get really hot, but SATA extension cards are also problematic. Adding some better passive cooling also often helps.
Using consumer hardware as a server.
Yes.
What’s that CPU cooler? I’ve been looking for super low profile coolers.
Its the stock CPU cooler that comes with the newer Intel’s (this is a 12th gen i3)
“Recycling brackets”, 1000 pcs bag.
This bag contains already used zip ties in various lengths and colours. You can reuse the items and be creative. Build modern art for your living room, a fan holding bracket for your server or a cool handle for your hot coffee cup.
Nice, I ended up just taping a fan on underneath using HVAC tape applied directly to the heatsink.
The plastic screw thing that holds the heatsink on can become brittle and break after some years. It might be worth picking up some small nylon bolts online before that happens.
Edit: or I guess zip ties would work if it comes to that…
I placed my fan over the heatsink and did an X pattern in zipties to hold it all in place
Tag this as NSFW!!!