BonzaiDuck
Lifer
- Jun 30, 2004
- 16,333
- 1,890
- 126
Originally posted by: ThaJollyMan
Thanks for the comments!
JPB...i say stupid thanksgiving only because i have to work that day...otherwise i love thanksgiving...I loves me cranberry's and turkey!
BonzaiDuck...that fan controller looks sweet...i was looking at the Zalman mfc1 and i never really saw that Silverstone commander...but if i am going to order one then you have just made up my mind on which one to get, cause that one looks SCHWEEET!
I am assuming that that fan controller can use 4 pin molex connectors to control the fans instead of having to buy 4 to 3 pin adapters? That controller looks like it would be perfect for my case...no knobs or lights on the front...all internal...awesome! I will have to wait a bit before buying that though, seeing as how i just dropped over $400 on the water cooling components. BonzaiDuck...do you have this controller? As for the stock cooling on the GPU's...i did order 2 universal GPU blocks from Koolance.com. Here are the components i ordered:
CPU Block: http://www.koolance.com/water-...nfo.php?product_id=664
GPU Block x2: http://www.koolance.com/water-...nfo.php?product_id=566
(not a big fan of the aluminum tops...but we'll see how they perform)
Resorvoir: http://www.koolance.com/water-...nfo.php?product_id=652
Pump: http://dangerden.com/store/pro...uctid=356&cat=4&page=1
120.1 Rad: http://dangerden.com/store/pro...ductid=1&cat=85&page=1
120.2 Rad: http://dangerden.com/store/pro...ductid=2&cat=85&page=1
Tubing: http://dangerden.com/store/pro...ctid=372&cat=33&page=1
(i ordered this tubing because it is supposed to be the most fexible on the market)
Liquid: http://dangerden.com/store/pro...ctid=317&cat=63&page=1
the water flow setup i had in mind is going to be:
pump->cpu->120.1 rad->gpu1->gpu2->120.2 rad->resorvoir->pump
I am thinking later on if i want to add chipset cooling i can just put the NB and SB blocks between the cpu and 120.1 rad. So, it would be cpu->NB->SB->120.1 rad and so on. Youg uys think the pump i listed would be strong enough to handle all that in teh future?
I am using Thermaltake thunderblade fans that do a maximum of 75 CFM. Any ideas on the air flow for the fans? As i said before i will have 2 fans on teh bottom of the case and one on the top. One fan on the 120.1 rad which will be placed on the rear exhaust port of the case and the 120.2 rad in the front. Just wanted to get some ideas for the push or pull(intake/exhaust) of the fans in the case. This is what i was thinking:
120.2 rad: intake
120.1 rad: exhaust
2x bottom case fans: exhaust
1x top case fan: intake
If i decide to put a fan in the window i was thinking of setting it up as intake for cool air on the gpu ramsinks. Any other ideas are much appreciated!
Just read this reviewon the Silverstone commander...
http://www.techpowerup.com/rev.../Commander_ESA_Edition
Apparently i will need to purchase 4 to 3 pin adapters![]()
Sorry so long to get back. To answer your question: Yeah, I have it. I'm reee-ally happy with it. The criticisms (thumb down) in the review link -- some of them -- aren't really justified. For instance, they diss the front bezel. For some cases, you can remove it, and install the 5.25" bay-cover that comes with the case.
I never purchase 4-to-3-pin adapters. I save all my three-pin plugs and wires from old computers, and just solder them. Thing is, if you don't have fans with tach-wires, you can't monitor the speed, but I believe you can control it, anyway. I always buy fans with tach wires and tach-monitoring.
I'll explain briefly my history on this issue. I ALWAYS thought manual, rheostat-adjustable fan controllers were clunky, even though I have a few installed in older machines. I have a friend who can't abide by ANY thermal control of fans -- he has to manually adjust everything.
Once I'd had a taste of SpeedFan thermal control of a Delta-Tri-Blade 120x38mm CPU fan, I wanted to thermally control everything. Everything! Unfortunately, the mid-range mobo I was using at that time did not provide for thermal control of anything but the CPU fan-plug, so I was searching around for other alternatives.
Eventually, I noticed that Sunbeam Tech was producing a unit called the Theta 101, I read a review of the product, and ordered it. This was the biggest scam I've ever seen: blue-and-white rheostat adjusters on the original review sample were conspicuously absent from the unit I ordered; the software didn't control anything; the unit only applied full power to the fans plugged into it; and because the software didn't work, the thermal sensors were useless. Soon, I found that Sunbeam's RMA department was not taking calls. I called them four times at their City-of-Industry location; never got a return call, and eventually gave up.
Then, I got a Striker Extreme 680i mobo. Q-Fan and the eight three-pin plugs with three associated thermal sensors spoiled me completely. So when I acquired an eVGA 780i board, I was severely disappointed over shortcomings in BIOS fan control. So I started looking around again, and discovered the Silverstone Commander.
Here, I still have problems, but not because of the controller. I have an E8600 CPU with the "stuck" thermal sensors, and the nVidia Tools software departs from the old version, discontinuing the monitoring of the TCase sensor. It only reports the TJunction core temperatures, and those sensors are stuck at 56C. I contacted Silverstone, they contacted nVidia, and reported back to me that nVidia would revise their software to include TCase by end of this year.
That leaves the tape-on thermal sensors that come with the Commander. This doesn't resolve my problem per the defective CPU sensors, though, because the thermal wattage of that processor is so low, taping the sensor to the side of the heatsink base doesn't register enough of a change to allow the sort of fan control you'd want. In the interim, I discovered that the PWM fan that comes with my heatpipe cooler is so quiet, it doesn't freaking matter for now.
However, the sensor-driven, thermal control of fans through ESA and the Commander still works. You can control all the fans attached; you can control a waterpump; you can control lights. Once you've defined a "profile," you can trim all fans to a desired speed through the software. The thermal control feature works if you can monitor temperature changes over a wider range than a few degrees centigrade, and of course you could set the sensors to respond to changes in room ambient.