- May 19, 2011
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I'm building a PC using the Coolermaster Elite 335U midi tower case, which has the PSU sitting at the bottom of the case. I haven't built a PC with this configuration before, and I'm a bit puzzled by something.
There's a cooling vent directly underneath the power supply, and the screw holes for mounting the power supply allow for it to be mounted either way around (with its main internal cooling fan pointing into the case or into the bottom vent). I suppose the reason for the PSU to be mountable in either direction is to allow as many different PSUs to be compatible with this case as possible, but I would have thought that drawing air from under the case is blatantly asking for as much dust to potentially get sucked in as possible, and the computer has to be switched off and put on its side in order to clean the vent.
At least with the fan pointing into the case that with warm air rising, warm air from the rest of the system won't naturally be drawn into the PSU. On the other hand, warm air rising from the PSU HSFs would naturally want to rise, with the PSU fan pushing it back down again (and hopefully out). I suppose with the PSU at the top of the case and the fan drawing air from the case into the PSU would encounter a similar effect.
There's an extra chassis fan beside the rear I/O panel, FYI.
Not sure. Thoughts?
There's a cooling vent directly underneath the power supply, and the screw holes for mounting the power supply allow for it to be mounted either way around (with its main internal cooling fan pointing into the case or into the bottom vent). I suppose the reason for the PSU to be mountable in either direction is to allow as many different PSUs to be compatible with this case as possible, but I would have thought that drawing air from under the case is blatantly asking for as much dust to potentially get sucked in as possible, and the computer has to be switched off and put on its side in order to clean the vent.
At least with the fan pointing into the case that with warm air rising, warm air from the rest of the system won't naturally be drawn into the PSU. On the other hand, warm air rising from the PSU HSFs would naturally want to rise, with the PSU fan pushing it back down again (and hopefully out). I suppose with the PSU at the top of the case and the fan drawing air from the case into the PSU would encounter a similar effect.
There's an extra chassis fan beside the rear I/O panel, FYI.
Not sure. Thoughts?