Originally posted by: BonzaiDuck
Hey, guys!
Terencek -- Woodbutcher gave me a heads-up to post here -- suggesting I might have something to offer.
I'm stunned that you can't get the idle temperature for a G0 quad-core below what you've shown. I wasn't able to read through all the other posts here -- I'm "keeping busy" -- but I took a look at the Cosmos case.
I don't think the Zalman 9500 stood up too well in the May 2007 Anandtech comparison review focusing on the ThermalRight Ultra-120-Extreme, and later -- with the Ultima 90 review. But your temperatures should still be well below what you've shown.
When I first saw the Cosmos several months ago, I thought it was promising, but I took a closer look.
It's just my opinion, but I see one rear exhaust fan 120mm and two top fans (which could only be exhaust, I would think, the way they shipped that case.) That leaves only a single intake fan at the bottom.
There are myriad opinions about this, but I stand firm from a few years of case-modding and air-cooling experience: my recommended strategy is to overwhelm the case interior with exhaust CFMs and pressure, seal the rest of the case, duct the air over the hot components and force it out through one or more exhaust fans. This case doesn't do that.
I'm still running a B3 Q6600. I've got it OC'd to 3.204 Ghz at the 9 multiplier and a Vcore of 1.4125V. The TCASE temperature at today's current room ambient of 70F is about 25C, and my idle TJUNCTION Core temperatures are 37,36,40,46 (Everest seems to load up Core#0 (46C) with all its sensor reading for the fans, voltages, temperatures, etc.)
I still have some ducting refinements to my case, and I've added a second intake fan BEHIND my hard disks -- that lowered my RAID5 disk temperatures by another 5C across the board.
You could keep the Zalman, but you could do better with this. IC Diamond thermal paste is $5 -- that's worth about 2C or so. You can lap your processor and heatsink base. Using ducts in that case wouldn't be terribly complicated, but I'd like to see more intake air coming into it -- a lot more.
If you don't want to mod that case, at least to figure out how to add one extra intake fan -- maybe even block off and remove the top fans -- you really might want to consider water-cooling.
On the UP side, if you can keep your core temperatures below 70C at load, the G0 is still immensely over-clockable. You have to decide what you're going to do with that case.
For instance, I've taken to adding bottom intake fans (I know you have ONE there already), and using double-wheeled casters to lift the case off the floor for air intake. An extra fan on the bottom might do it. But I just think the Cosmos has too many exhaust fans -- unless I'm mistaken and the top fans are really intake fans.
Well, I am glad that you posted this!! On Sunday night, I was thinking that there wasn't enough intake as well and I installed a spare 120mm fan that I had. There wasn't a place to install it under my DVD-RW drive so what I did was used zip ties and suspended it under the drive blowing to my CPU. Now what I may do from wood's suggestion would be to duct it straight to the CPU. That is what you were suggesting, right wood? I also have a 80mm fan that is mounted on the wall next to the HDDs blowing on the Vid Card.
No, the top fans ARE exhaust. I am looking to Water Cool soon, just need to get the $$. I just dropped a lot of money to get the 8800, Q6600, PSU, and the mobo, so I am a little drained, but there's always Christmas bonuses!
As it stands, I have the CPU OC'd to 3.0GHz with vCore at 1.200v. The ambient temps lately because of the nice cold front that has moved in (I live in Tampa Bay Area, FL) are around 72-75F. The idle is 36, 38, 40, 42 and when I run Prime95 or OCCT I'm at 55, 57, 58, 60. Now, that's with the side of the case open. Everytime I close the case, the temps are up about 2-3C, so I generally leave it off. I'll try ducting that new fan that I put in and post back with the results.
Thanks again for the intel!!