Appologies in advance for showing off but I'm going to anyway. A year or so ago I started down the quiet-computer road, gradually slowing down fans and powering down hard disks in persuit of peace and quiet (I moved somewhere rural where it was painfully quiet.) Anyway, I started considering the possibility of building a completely silent PC, now that useable solid state disks are arriving. A silent websurfer would be easy enough - but I wanted better than a netbook. I want to play games on my 1920x1200 screen.
So I finally got around to giving it a try. Recycled a few old bits - most notably an Asus M2A micro-ATX motherboard, Athlon 62 X2 BE-2400 processor (dual 2.3 GHz), and a passively cooled nVidia 8600GTS.
The case was the most important thing - inspired by the old Apevia QPack design (a uATX cube with windows on two sides and the top) I picked up a similar case, an Aplus Blockbuster (same design but I think a bit longer than the original QPack to fit a proper size PSU). Take out the plastic window panels and suddenly you have a very open case.
The processor was to be cooled with a Silverstone NT06-E without a fan. The Athlon X2 I have is a low-power version with a maximum 45W TDP so I hoped this would work out okay. Had to take a hacksaw to the case to get the heatsink to fit though.
The layout of the case puts the power supply unit directly above the PCI cards. This would be fine with a regular PSU with a bottom fan sucking out hot air, but the fanless unit I was planning on, a 500W from NorthQ, would do nothing but cover the GPU and act like an oven. So the PSU had to move - some hacksawing later and it found a new home where the DVD drive should be. This seems to work well, with the strange exception that the power cable has to come out of the front of the computer. My girlfriend gave me an odd look.
Added an OCZ Vertex 30GB SSD, installed Vista, and gave it a whirl. Eerie feeling as you switch it on and nothing happens, no sound, no movement. And then you're in Windows.
It would have been really nice if it could've stayed completely passive, but testing with Prime95 pushed the CPU up past 60 degrees C. Dropped the CPU core volts, even tried reducing the CPU speed down to 1.8 GHz, about as low as I could consider living with, but it was no use. Darn. Time to fit a fan =(
But then again, its a very quiet fan. A 12cm Akasa Amber with just barely enough juice to make it move does not make a great deal of noise, and thanks to some tweaking with Speedfan it only ever needs to come on when the CPU is working hard. I can sit and websurf, play music, write documents, and play Battlefield 2 at 1920x1200 at 60fps without the fan coming on, safe in the knowledge that if I ever need to find factors of prime numbers the fan will come on. And it has to be pretty quiet to hear that it has. Added some stand-offs to raise the fan up a little - its presence was blocking some airflow through the heatsink when the fan wasn't running, but it seems better now.
Pics:
Front
Right side
Left side
Okay, so the PSU is partly held in place by a lump of blu-tack, but only one
Is it totally quiet? Totally? No. You can hear the processor speeding up and slowing down (Cool N Quiet) in the faint hum of the power supply. Is it quiet _enough_ now? YES =)))
So I finally got around to giving it a try. Recycled a few old bits - most notably an Asus M2A micro-ATX motherboard, Athlon 62 X2 BE-2400 processor (dual 2.3 GHz), and a passively cooled nVidia 8600GTS.
The case was the most important thing - inspired by the old Apevia QPack design (a uATX cube with windows on two sides and the top) I picked up a similar case, an Aplus Blockbuster (same design but I think a bit longer than the original QPack to fit a proper size PSU). Take out the plastic window panels and suddenly you have a very open case.
The processor was to be cooled with a Silverstone NT06-E without a fan. The Athlon X2 I have is a low-power version with a maximum 45W TDP so I hoped this would work out okay. Had to take a hacksaw to the case to get the heatsink to fit though.
The layout of the case puts the power supply unit directly above the PCI cards. This would be fine with a regular PSU with a bottom fan sucking out hot air, but the fanless unit I was planning on, a 500W from NorthQ, would do nothing but cover the GPU and act like an oven. So the PSU had to move - some hacksawing later and it found a new home where the DVD drive should be. This seems to work well, with the strange exception that the power cable has to come out of the front of the computer. My girlfriend gave me an odd look.
Added an OCZ Vertex 30GB SSD, installed Vista, and gave it a whirl. Eerie feeling as you switch it on and nothing happens, no sound, no movement. And then you're in Windows.
It would have been really nice if it could've stayed completely passive, but testing with Prime95 pushed the CPU up past 60 degrees C. Dropped the CPU core volts, even tried reducing the CPU speed down to 1.8 GHz, about as low as I could consider living with, but it was no use. Darn. Time to fit a fan =(
But then again, its a very quiet fan. A 12cm Akasa Amber with just barely enough juice to make it move does not make a great deal of noise, and thanks to some tweaking with Speedfan it only ever needs to come on when the CPU is working hard. I can sit and websurf, play music, write documents, and play Battlefield 2 at 1920x1200 at 60fps without the fan coming on, safe in the knowledge that if I ever need to find factors of prime numbers the fan will come on. And it has to be pretty quiet to hear that it has. Added some stand-offs to raise the fan up a little - its presence was blocking some airflow through the heatsink when the fan wasn't running, but it seems better now.
Pics:
Front
Right side
Left side
Okay, so the PSU is partly held in place by a lump of blu-tack, but only one
Is it totally quiet? Totally? No. You can hear the processor speeding up and slowing down (Cool N Quiet) in the faint hum of the power supply. Is it quiet _enough_ now? YES =)))
