CPU Cooling Idea

Maxil223

Member
Nov 29, 2004
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Ive heard on many computer thats people have the fan on their heatsink, blowing down, and on others, blowing up. So lets say my fan was blowing up, could i just run PVC from the tip of the fan, straight to case fan blowing out of the case??
 

BW86

Lifer
Jul 20, 2004
13,114
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yes you can do that. The hsf on my old dell 866mhz had that. They didnt use pvc though :p
 

stevennoland

Senior member
Aug 29, 2003
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Why stop at the case? Get a twenty foot flexible hose (80mm in diameter) and run it outside of the room (house).
 

Nyati13

Senior member
Jan 2, 2003
785
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Originally posted by: stevennoland
Why stop at the case? Get a twenty foot flexible hose (80mm in diameter) and run it outside of the room (house).


It would take a pretty powerful fan to push air through a hose that long, unless a much larger(and louder) fan was attached at the outside end to pull air mass out.
 

Cerb

Elite Member
Aug 26, 2000
17,484
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Yes, although PVC would be heavy. You could fold & staple a duct together from plastic folders pretty easily.
 

Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
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Originally posted by: Maxil223
Ive heard on many computer thats people have the fan on their heatsink, blowing down, and on others, blowing up. So lets say my fan was blowing up, could i just run PVC from the tip of the fan, straight to case fan blowing out of the case??
True, you are not the first... It's called a "duct" :p
Most heatsinks are designed for air to be blowing down on them. The Alpha's are about the only HS that I know of that are designed for air to be sucked up off them.
And if you've got extra holes, it works even better :laugh:
 

Icepick

Diamond Member
Nov 1, 2004
3,663
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My old Gateway2000 Pentium II was cooled with a duct going from the heatsink directly to the lower fan in the power supply. No other case fans were included. That was their stock cooling method.
 

BonzaiDuck

Lifer
Jun 30, 2004
16,677
2,052
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I think the slight difference in cooling performance with "sucking off" the heatsink versus "blowing onto" it has to do with air-pressure. exhausting air off the sink decreases pressure slightly where it is needed; blowing it onto the sink increases pressure slightly. Denser air -- more heat capacity-- better cooling.

Some of the benchmarks done on my CPU heat-sink show differences of 1 or 2 degrees C between one approach and the other. . .