Ok, there is a guy I know saying that his P4 (I don't know the speed) runs at 57F (yes farenheit), when the room temp is ~70F. Hes is using this HSF.
I immediately called BS, but a friend backed him up. So I do quick search on google and find this article.
Some quotes:
Going Below Ambient - Going below ambient temp ( ambient air around the heat exchanger) is not possible with normal Heat Sink or straight water cooled systems.
100% Efficiency - Its impossible to hit 100% efficient. Its also pretty hard to tell what your system is really running at, but if you get figures that your system is 100% or above... time to re-calibrate some of your temp tools.
Well then he replies with some crap about Bernoulli's Principle of Pressure. Accept it's not crap. It basically states that if you decrease the size of a fluid (gas or liquid) path, the velocity increases while pressure and temp. decrease. He's saying that as the air is forced into the narrower crevices of the heatsink, the velocity of that air is increased, thereby decreasing both pressure and temperature. Now this cooler than ambient air is reducing his CPU temp to below ambient temp. This actaully makes some sense, but I know there is now way it decreases air temp enough to get the CPU down to 57F.
Can someone give me some more insight into this? Any physicists on this board?
I immediately called BS, but a friend backed him up. So I do quick search on google and find this article.
Some quotes:
Going Below Ambient - Going below ambient temp ( ambient air around the heat exchanger) is not possible with normal Heat Sink or straight water cooled systems.
100% Efficiency - Its impossible to hit 100% efficient. Its also pretty hard to tell what your system is really running at, but if you get figures that your system is 100% or above... time to re-calibrate some of your temp tools.
Well then he replies with some crap about Bernoulli's Principle of Pressure. Accept it's not crap. It basically states that if you decrease the size of a fluid (gas or liquid) path, the velocity increases while pressure and temp. decrease. He's saying that as the air is forced into the narrower crevices of the heatsink, the velocity of that air is increased, thereby decreasing both pressure and temperature. Now this cooler than ambient air is reducing his CPU temp to below ambient temp. This actaully makes some sense, but I know there is now way it decreases air temp enough to get the CPU down to 57F.
Can someone give me some more insight into this? Any physicists on this board?