Hello all. 
First, the important system specs:
Enlight 7237 case
Athlon XP 1600+ (o/c'd to ~1800+)
Arkua 7528 heatsink/fan combo
Two case fans: One sucking in at the bottom front, and the power supply fan blowing out the top back
According to motherboard monitor, my CPU idle temp is in the upper 50s C, and my case temp is in the upper 30s. When playing BF1942, it gets up to the lower 60s and lower 40s, respectively. I'd like to bring the CPU temp down.
Considering that my room temperature is ~22 C, my feeling is that the heatsink/fan are doing their job, but the case is just trapping in all that hot air. The case really isn't set up very well for good airflow. The CPU is located near the power supply (top backside of the case), which means that the incoming air (at the bottom front of the case) doesn't even reach the CPU. In fact, in my own unscientific testing it feels like the incoming air gets trapped at the bottom of the case by the drive bays and my PCI cards.
I think the optimal solution would be to install something resembling a pipe that would extend from the front fan straight to the CPU. I tried using a single piece of cardboard to "channel" the incoming air that way, and while that actually did lower CPU temps a few degees C, it still wasn't very efficient.
Has anyone tried something similar or have any suggestions on how I could do this?
Thanks in advance.
-Arschloch
First, the important system specs:
Enlight 7237 case
Athlon XP 1600+ (o/c'd to ~1800+)
Arkua 7528 heatsink/fan combo
Two case fans: One sucking in at the bottom front, and the power supply fan blowing out the top back
According to motherboard monitor, my CPU idle temp is in the upper 50s C, and my case temp is in the upper 30s. When playing BF1942, it gets up to the lower 60s and lower 40s, respectively. I'd like to bring the CPU temp down.
Considering that my room temperature is ~22 C, my feeling is that the heatsink/fan are doing their job, but the case is just trapping in all that hot air. The case really isn't set up very well for good airflow. The CPU is located near the power supply (top backside of the case), which means that the incoming air (at the bottom front of the case) doesn't even reach the CPU. In fact, in my own unscientific testing it feels like the incoming air gets trapped at the bottom of the case by the drive bays and my PCI cards.
I think the optimal solution would be to install something resembling a pipe that would extend from the front fan straight to the CPU. I tried using a single piece of cardboard to "channel" the incoming air that way, and while that actually did lower CPU temps a few degees C, it still wasn't very efficient.
Has anyone tried something similar or have any suggestions on how I could do this?
Thanks in advance.
-Arschloch