So I have been looking for a HDD cooling solution

GasX

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
29,033
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I have spent some time looking for a HDD cooling solution that was 1. functional, 2. quiet and 3. did not have an external faceplate.

I finally found this. It is perfect - a simple heat sink / noise dampening unit. Hot the hell do you justify a $50 price tag? :Q

I can get a unit with a 7 in 1 card reader, fan controls and a digital readout for that money... :confused:

Anyone know of a simple HDD heatsink that is cheap and still lets the drive sit in a 3.5" bay?
 
Jan 31, 2002
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$50 for that? :Q

If you've got enough vertical clearance, just strap a CPU/northbridge heatsink on top. No, I'm not kidding.

- M4H
 
Jan 31, 2002
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Originally posted by: Mwilding
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
$50 for that? :Q
exactly! :Q
If you've got enough vertical clearance, just strap a CPU/northbridge heatsink on top. No, I'm not kidding.

- M4H
interesting...

No kidding. In those MicroATX Silverstone cases, there's two drives in the top (Seagate Cuda IV 40GBs). With the top on, they hit a roasting 45C apiece during a heavy thrash. Popped the top and they stayed there. Strapped a slim Socket7 heatsink to the each side of the pair and topped it with the A-block from a Zalman heatpipe. Whammo - 38/39C on the drives. :p

- M4H
 

PingSpike

Lifer
Feb 25, 2004
21,757
600
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An old slot 1 cpu HS would probably be a good fit for the top I would think. I never thought about putting a sink on a harddrive before.
 

GasX

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
29,033
6
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Originally posted by: PingSpikeI never thought about putting a sink on a harddrive before.
I have had some issues with hard drives in the past and I want to hedge my bets a little and prevent this from being the cause of future problems. My new case has a fan blowing right through the HDD cage, so that's a start...

 

Mrvile

Lifer
Oct 16, 2004
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Hmm, dual 50mm fans running at 5k rpm apiece. Wouldn't that be a bit loud?
 

GasX

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
29,033
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Originally posted by: Mrvile
Hmm, dual 50mm fans running at 5k rpm apiece. Wouldn't that be a bit loud?

That's why I'd not power the fans and just let the heatsink do its work as the HDD sits in front of the case fan in my box...
 

Tiamat

Lifer
Nov 25, 2003
14,068
5
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I have the Passive Zalman heatpipe one and it did very little/nothing alone. In fact, the HDD still got pretty hot. However, upon removing the 5.25" bay cover, temps decreased by 10-15C as my rear exhaust 120mm fan was drawing air from that bay cover. Yes, I do have dust problems, but 10-15C on my HDD is worth cleaning my case once every 2 weeks. (peak temp with 5.25" cover in place was 52C, peak temp without 5.25" cover is 38-42C)
 

GasX

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
29,033
6
81
Originally posted by: Tiamat
I have the Passive Zalman heatpipe one and it did very little/nothing alone. In fact, the HDD still got pretty hot. However, upon removing the 5.25" bay cover, temps decreased by 10-15C as my rear exhaust 120mm fan was drawing air from that bay cover. Yes, I do have dust problems, but 10-15C on my HDD is worth cleaning my case once every 2 weeks. (peak temp with 5.25" cover in place was 52C, peak temp without 5.25" cover is 38-42C)

does that thing make things quieter as well?
 
Jan 31, 2002
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Originally posted by: Mwilding
Originally posted by: Tiamat
I have the Passive Zalman heatpipe one and it did very little/nothing alone. In fact, the HDD still got pretty hot. However, upon removing the 5.25" bay cover, temps decreased by 10-15C as my rear exhaust 120mm fan was drawing air from that bay cover. Yes, I do have dust problems, but 10-15C on my HDD is worth cleaning my case once every 2 weeks. (peak temp with 5.25" cover in place was 52C, peak temp without 5.25" cover is 38-42C)

does that thing make things quieter as well?

Opening a hole in the case will not make it quieter.

If you've got the space, I'm going to suggest going with the heatsink approach even more. For kicks, I strapped a pair of S370 sinks to a Seagate with basically zero ambient airflow. Didn't even break 35C when it was being hammered with a good hard defrag. :Q

- M4H
 
Jan 31, 2002
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Originally posted by: Sentinel
wouldn't it be fine just with an 80mm blowing on/across it?

For the most part, yes, but hard drives don't have a lot of surface area. That's why heatsinks are finned instead of a solid chunk. He's also looking for some "thermal insurance" as well as keeping things quiet.

- M4H
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
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Ultimate Hard Drive Cooler

Even without the fans, it still should do something. I have one, but I never actually did any before and after tests. The first hard drive that went in it didn't have temperature monitoring, and every hard drive I've had since has gone straight into the heatsink. It does get quite warm, so it is wicking heat away from the drive.



Oh. Darn. I just saw that bit about having to have it in the 3.5" bay. Um.....move the drive into a 5.25" bay?:)
Oh well, you could always just buy another case, one with a cooled hard drive cage. :p
 

Sentinel

Diamond Member
Jun 23, 2000
3,714
1
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Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: Sentinel
wouldn't it be fine just with an 80mm blowing on/across it?

For the most part, yes, but hard drives don't have a lot of surface area. That's why heatsinks are finned instead of a solid chunk. He's also looking for some "thermal insurance" as well as keeping things quiet.

- M4H

gotcha...:thumbsup:
 

Rongisnom

Junior Member
Nov 16, 2004
17
0
0
How did you attach the heat sink to the HD. I'm getting all the parts for a new rig on Monday and this is sounding like a very simple and interesting idea.