R.I.P SLI!. When using 2 graphics cards like a decade ago, this used to make significant difference in temps for my top GPU back in the day. I even had a second fan wedged at the start of the 2 GPUs and had a wind tunnel effect going on. Game changer in Summer!
I did this exact thing to keep my cheap, undervolted Titan X cool/quiet enough while holding over for GPU prices to drop :D I used one of the included case fans with my Seasonic Syncro Q704 (120mm Nidec fans) and it fit perfectly on the case I was using (Phanteks Evolv X). I used zip ties to give it a nice, secure mount. I also removed the PCI brackets and mounted it INSIDE the PC btw.
I did this with my old build. at first I took the rgb fan off the original ryzen heatsink and mounted it in that exact area. worked like a charm on my first pc and ive been doing it ever since. 80mm fans seem to fit the best. not the best for dust tho but oh well. lol
You're much better off getting a case with fan mounts on the bottom so you're pulling fresh cool air directly into your GPU fans. But I suppose this is a practical hack if your case doesn't have any and your GPU is running excessively hot.
i do use a 80mm fan below the GPU but installed by inside, had to remove those metal things you take off where you plug the monitor cables, i dont see a big difference but makes me feel better
I taped one fan under my GPU and had it setup where it would blow air to the GPU. And open up the side panel. The temps on my 580 went from 73 to 65-66 after 1 hour of gaming. The thing was amazing!
I put a 90mm fan from an old shitty PSU (silver office psu) and it drops 5 degrees, this is amazing. I wonder if buying something like noctua 93mm fan would further drop the temps. Anyways, nice find and thanks for sharing.
I did this but I put the fan (80mm Arctic) inside the case as a intake, fans are running at 40% instead of 50% in benchmark with the same temps, so in my case it was a improvement, it's quieter now. :))
I see that there are already holes in the PCI brackets... You just need one screw to attach it firmly, and if you're lucky, at least 2 holes will match with the holes in the fan. And probably you can fit it inside the case...
That would be better as an intake seeing as it’s below your gpu fans which are intaking. You’re pulling the hot air from the gpu towards where the gpu fans are pulling air into the gpu. Not the greatest setup but more airflow is still more airflow.
Ahhh well, adding more airflow reduce Temps a bit. Here is a hack Put an AiO on the CPU and GPU, and put the radiator outside the case. Preferably the side you never see. Or if you have an awesome looking radiator it's fine too. Aquacomputer makes some that look great. Adding some fans that lock modular without cables. On the other hand. I had a really neat bench case with very clean cables n tubes. Actually mounted on the wall, too.
But what was the temperature delta vs ambient? Pulling directly in is better. It raises inner case tamps but lowers core temps which is where performance lies.
Instead of tinkering with toy fans, plug an electric leaf blower directly to the intake of the PC case. If its too noisy, leave it in the garden and run a tube to the PC. That will cool your RTX 4090 and the i9-14900k CPU.
I feel like this was just caused by hot air not exhausting good enough in stock config. Esp since you said PCI fans didn't work, it was probably just recirculating hot air coming off the side. You should try using the delta fan as the case exhaust and see if it gives the same difference
lol I got a small desk fan that I currently have facing into my pc case. It lowers my CPU temps by around 5°c when not under load. It's also very loud (although I don't mind too much).
Did this same test as well and also printed 3d bracket to move air flow inside the case and feed rear GPU fan with air - either additional exhaust and intake didn't made a difference. Maybe because i was running additional fan at reasonable speed to not make more noise than GPU itself does. For me, there is no point of adding fan if I can't lower temps without increasing noise. If only temp is the problem - I have few 5-6k rpms delta fans from servers as well as 3 120mm 6k RPM server rack fans - I can put them on and crank the speed to the max. Temps will be lower, but at what noise costs? Also I think it depends on GPU and case airflow. I have 3 front fans blowing nicely air and I think they have enough power to blow air through the case, without need for additional GPU exhaust fan.
Best thin you can do is give it colder air. If you would put small fan coil climatisation in a box with your pc, to reduce amount of air and seperate this air from your room. This can keep air at for example 15c, keeping your air that enters pc really cold, is like playing games at winter when it is summer.
Your fan was configured to exhaust hot air, but I believe the opposite might be more beneficial. Configuring it to intake air would supply fresh air directly to the GPU's fans. You could also switch the bottom front fan to function as an exhaust to improve airflow. I watched two videos from Major Hardware and Optimum regarding channeling air to components with ducted air supply, and it significantly improved performance by approximately 10 degrees.
I guess not because - as far as I know - the graphics card coolers are designed to intake the air inside the case and exhaust to the rear. For that you would need to mount the fan lower, otherwise the graphics card fans have to fight against the rear cooler.
@@Durayne the holes in the PCIE slot are so insignificant that the gpu fans wouldnt really care. Forcing air through small unsealed holes with a fan at distance is difficult.
@@pineapplej7310Of Course you cant apply static pressure in that scenario. Still youd probably have colliding air streams. I supply my graphics card with fresh air from the bottom, as I use the torrent compact with some bottom fans.
SIDE FAN rocks if you have a case that supports this... my crappy older case has way better cooling than most modern cases. My side fan is right next to my graphics card and the air coming out is pretty hot even though it's only running at 300RPM and can't even be heard. In fact, I feel hot air even when the fan isn't installed. I modded my GTX1080 with Noctua fans and have a pretty much dead silent PC using "FANCONTROL" software. I can only just BARELY hear my computer and that's ONLY if a game is stressing my GPU. It's 100% dead silent for most tasks as my Noctua fans sit between 300RPM and 500RPM most of the time.
Hello nice vid ! I just go a lianli lancool 216 and this is and option on this pc case so i was thinking about trying but it seems not worth it - Ty, new sub.
at this point, if I could buy a pc like this, I would probably think about a deshroud mod kit for the 3090. there are a lot on the internet, ready to mount and the temps improvement is about 15/20 C° less, under heavy load
Edit: ~whoa, now that I’ve watched the video to the end, why are you exhausting air? It would only make sense to suck air out if it was a blower card. A dual/triple fan cooler, you should be blowing air in. Try that.~ Getting cool air directly to your GPU that takes hot air from inside your case and releases hotter air inside your case, placement is good, but back in the day, we didn’t use stupid crap like glass for side panels, so you could mount a fan on the side panel and achieve the same thing. To be fair both of my currently in use cases have glass side covers, but I’m liquid cooling. You can do it a lot cheaper than you’d think, maybe $200 is a lot for most people, never mind.
Warm air rises, would it make a bigger difference turning the fan around so it blows cool air in under your video card, the video card fans blow the air up and the psu blows the air out. (Dust could be a problem depending on your environment.)
Based on youtube videos where people test pc case airflow using a smoke machine, the gpu sucks cool air from outside the case from the pci slot holes. Sounds weird but I guess that's how pc case engineers does things. The best gpu temperature improvement you could get is blowing air into the case rather than exhausting it. I don't have any test to prove this but it kinda sounds about right.
I just tried it and it didn't made any difference at all actually, my casing was perfect for to fit a fan near pci slots, But still it didn't made any difference when at full load. But now gpu cools down much faster than before when unloaded the load.
Over the slot covers/grills...? WhatTF are you thinking!??? Remove them already!! That will give way more airflow and way less noise... you do realise that right..?! not too difficult for you to grock? And no it wont help on a blower style cooler: The warm air exhausted by you GF card ends up right back in the intake area, where it's recycled in a ever hotter loop. The fan minimises that... If you want a cooler, quieter blower style GF card; remove its grille already! Hellooo!!!
Actually janky since the cold air from the GPU (which is minimal already in most cases) is taken away from it. There should be better results with the fan blowing inside the GPU / creating FAN ducts towards the GPU aswell as isolate the GPU fans from the backplate where the air will be circulating back to the fans.
I feel like I’d probably take an an otherwise garbage oem 93mm fan and zip tie it to the back. I’ve done this before, zip tying an Amd stock fan to my pcie brackets. Doesn’t really do anything but it’s the thought. Also the last modern cards to come with blower coolers were 20 series
I agree that this isn't worth it. I've experimented with mounting fans in all sorts of places to better cool my gpu but I found that the gains were minimal. Also should warn anyone that using a fan with too high rpm blowing towards the card could actually damage your card or card fan. This is a problem for cpus too. Basically you can end up spinning your gpu or cpu fan too fast, causing it to become a generator. That's why when you get a dual fan set up like noctua cpu coolers, the fans are identical and spin the same speed to avoid this problem. Best option IMO is just adjusting the fan curve in MSI afterburner. I cooled an rx 560 from 83C to 70C, but most games it runs at about 66C. So a difference of 13 degrees, which was a lot more than any extra fan configuration. Most gpu fan curves are set up from factory to balance between cooling and quietness. Aside from a custom fan curve, setting up an underclock helps keep it cool too. Both these options can work in tandem to cool better than extra fans, and not potentially turn your actual gpu fan into a generator. Lmao.
so just scored myself a used RADEON HD 6450 1GB GDDR3 for my 530S internet browsing and youtube....for pennies on ebay....but the card does not come wit a fan on it.....touched the heat sink - was really hot could barely hold my finger on it....but put a small 5 volt .200 amp fan on it via usb made all the difference ...now it's cool to the touch. 530S not really designed for card like that :) so getting a usb fan probably costs as much as the card itself nowadays....but it works. now need to figure how to fit the fan on card....now it kind of just sits there #lolz
@@DLMtechgarage great idea....was thinking hot glue gun but not sure would bite to metal + metal getting too hot....but if metal stays cool might work..I like your idea though...
@@DLMtechgarage and yet, there are still idiots out there who think it is about the number of fans in their case, even though having more beyond where you should (back a couple in front) does not lower temps by more than 3 C....SMH
Hah! I've done this before as an experiment and ya, it does work. It's just too ugly- I had the fan on the inside though. It was just a standard size fan (I think 80mm)
Help me please I want this assembly i7 4790 128 GB SSD 1 to the hard disk 10 GB RAM with motherboard and PSU Mini Boîtier Simple How much does it cost please
Im guessing 130-220 dollars depending on ur motherboard. If you are gonna get it through a dell optiplex build its gonna be on the chrapeiside. Also i dont think 10gb ram is possible since there aren't 5 gb ram sticks, unless you are mixing ram ofcourse WHICH YOU SHOULD NEVER DO. Settle for 8gb ram instead
@@JonLeonard wouldn't matter if he was mixing ram or not, there is no 10 gigs of ram unless he's got 10 ram slots at 1 gig per stick... which the actual number would be 10.240 gigs.
there's nothing more permanent than a temporary solution that hasn't broken yet
well said!!
Redneck Redemption.
lol...
R.I.P SLI!. When using 2 graphics cards like a decade ago, this used to make significant difference in temps for my top GPU back in the day. I even had a second fan wedged at the start of the 2 GPUs and had a wind tunnel effect going on. Game changer in Summer!
with most modern PCI brackets having holes in them, it's easy to think that actually using those holes can make a huge difference
Cut the brackets off haha
@@ConsensusX most brackets are screwed in, but you need the bracket to properly support the GPU or it could cause damage over time.
@@JessicaFEREM What do you mean?
The Lian Li Lancool 216 case already has this feature, it comes with a backplate bracket for the 120mm fan that exhaust air from the case.
I did this exact thing to keep my cheap, undervolted Titan X cool/quiet enough while holding over for GPU prices to drop :D I used one of the included case fans with my Seasonic Syncro Q704 (120mm Nidec fans) and it fit perfectly on the case I was using (Phanteks Evolv X). I used zip ties to give it a nice, secure mount. I also removed the PCI brackets and mounted it INSIDE the PC btw.
did it lower your gpu temp significantly?
and the results were
I did this with my old build. at first I took the rgb fan off the original ryzen heatsink and mounted it in that exact area. worked like a charm on my first pc and ive been doing it ever since. 80mm fans seem to fit the best. not the best for dust tho but oh well. lol
When I switched over to a hyper 212 from the stock AMD cooler, I noticed an slight increase in GPU temps. Any air movement will definitely help.
yup, even hot air is better then no air!!
You're much better off getting a case with fan mounts on the bottom so you're pulling fresh cool air directly into your GPU fans. But I suppose this is a practical hack if your case doesn't have any and your GPU is running excessively hot.
i do use a 80mm fan below the GPU but installed by inside, had to remove those metal things you take off where you plug the monitor cables, i dont see a big difference but makes me feel better
I taped one fan under my GPU and had it setup where it would blow air to the GPU. And open up the side panel. The temps on my 580 went from 73 to 65-66 after 1 hour of gaming. The thing was amazing!
I did something like this back then when i had dual GPU´s installed (R9 290´s, gtx 970´s and gtx 1070´s). it made a huge difference
Maybe we’ll live in a future with 3 front intake and 3 rear exhaust fans for cases 😅
lol!!
It is a good idea for sure. But I think if you place this fan, even smaller size inside the case, it might be better.
I put a 90mm fan from an old shitty PSU (silver office psu) and it drops 5 degrees, this is amazing. I wonder if buying something like noctua 93mm fan would further drop the temps. Anyways, nice find and thanks for sharing.
I did this but I put the fan (80mm Arctic) inside the case as a intake, fans are running at 40% instead of 50% in benchmark with the same temps, so in my case it was a improvement, it's quieter now. :))
I see that there are already holes in the PCI brackets... You just need one screw to attach it firmly, and if you're lucky, at least 2 holes will match with the holes in the fan. And probably you can fit it inside the case...
Thanks to your video I started to use mod like this too 😊, it helps a little bit so anyway it is better than nothing.
A case with more airflow will be a better investment after looking at the power use from your pc wear and tear on PSU
That would be better as an intake seeing as it’s below your gpu fans which are intaking. You’re pulling the hot air from the gpu towards where the gpu fans are pulling air into the gpu. Not the greatest setup but more airflow is still more airflow.
Agree, but then there is dust problem…
Ahhh well, adding more airflow reduce Temps a bit.
Here is a hack
Put an AiO on the CPU and GPU, and put the radiator outside the case.
Preferably the side you never see.
Or if you have an awesome looking radiator it's fine too.
Aquacomputer makes some that look great.
Adding some fans that lock modular without cables.
On the other hand.
I had a really neat bench case with very clean cables n tubes.
Actually mounted on the wall, too.
But what was the temperature delta vs ambient? Pulling directly in is better. It raises inner case tamps but lowers core temps which is where performance lies.
Instead of tinkering with toy fans, plug an electric leaf blower directly to the intake of the PC case. If its too noisy, leave it in the garden and run a tube to the PC. That will cool your RTX 4090 and the i9-14900k CPU.
I feel like this was just caused by hot air not exhausting good enough in stock config. Esp since you said PCI fans didn't work, it was probably just recirculating hot air coming off the side. You should try using the delta fan as the case exhaust and see if it gives the same difference
Agreed. Seeing how his exhaust fan isn’t even blowing
Silverstone makes dedicated ones, just for the purpose of adding a Fan at the rear end, also with air filters I believe
lol I got a small desk fan that I currently have facing into my pc case. It lowers my CPU temps by around 5°c when not under load. It's also very loud (although I don't mind too much).
Did this same test as well and also printed 3d bracket to move air flow inside the case and feed rear GPU fan with air - either additional exhaust and intake didn't made a difference.
Maybe because i was running additional fan at reasonable speed to not make more noise than GPU itself does. For me, there is no point of adding fan if I can't lower temps without increasing noise.
If only temp is the problem - I have few 5-6k rpms delta fans from servers as well as 3 120mm 6k RPM server rack fans - I can put them on and crank the speed to the max. Temps will be lower, but at what noise costs?
Also I think it depends on GPU and case airflow. I have 3 front fans blowing nicely air and I think they have enough power to blow air through the case, without need for additional GPU exhaust fan.
Best thin you can do is give it colder air. If you would put small fan coil climatisation in a box with your pc, to reduce amount of air and seperate this air from your room. This can keep air at for example 15c, keeping your air that enters pc really cold, is like playing games at winter when it is summer.
So how would I go about this? Do I put my PC in a cardboard box with my fan?
@@zoro-i8u a box would be better than all cases that have glass panels.
3:13 Fixing a fan to the case with adhesive tape is the same thing as asking to dislike the video...
Your fan was configured to exhaust hot air, but I believe the opposite might be more beneficial. Configuring it to intake air would supply fresh air directly to the GPU's fans. You could also switch the bottom front fan to function as an exhaust to improve airflow. I watched two videos from Major Hardware and Optimum regarding channeling air to components with ducted air supply, and it significantly improved performance by approximately 10 degrees.
I guess not because - as far as I know - the graphics card coolers are designed to intake the air inside the case and exhaust to the rear.
For that you would need to mount the fan lower, otherwise the graphics card fans have to fight against the rear cooler.
@@Durayne the holes in the PCIE slot are so insignificant that the gpu fans wouldnt really care. Forcing air through small unsealed holes with a fan at distance is difficult.
@@pineapplej7310Of Course you cant apply static pressure in that scenario.
Still youd probably have colliding air streams.
I supply my graphics card with fresh air from the bottom, as I use the torrent compact with some bottom fans.
SIDE FAN rocks if you have a case that supports this... my crappy older case has way better cooling than most modern cases. My side fan is right next to my graphics card and the air coming out is pretty hot even though it's only running at 300RPM and can't even be heard. In fact, I feel hot air even when the fan isn't installed. I modded my GTX1080 with Noctua fans and have a pretty much dead silent PC using "FANCONTROL" software. I can only just BARELY hear my computer and that's ONLY if a game is stressing my GPU. It's 100% dead silent for most tasks as my Noctua fans sit between 300RPM and 500RPM most of the time.
nobody talks about Side Fan. All you hear is airflow. When I see that RGB clean pc, I see overheating/noisy.
New Subscriber i love your voice ❤❤
Thanks for subbing!
Hello nice vid ! I just go a lianli lancool 216 and this is and option on this pc case so i was thinking about trying but it seems not worth it - Ty, new sub.
Thanks for the sub
This idea seems more gimmicky then what it's worth
You should incorporate a sprinkler system in it, that'll cool it... Lol.
at this point, if I could buy a pc like this, I would probably think about a deshroud mod kit for the 3090. there are a lot on the internet, ready to mount and the temps improvement is about 15/20 C° less, under heavy load
Edit: ~whoa, now that I’ve watched the video to the end, why are you exhausting air? It would only make sense to suck air out if it was a blower card. A dual/triple fan cooler, you should be blowing air in. Try that.~
Getting cool air directly to your GPU that takes hot air from inside your case and releases hotter air inside your case, placement is good, but back in the day, we didn’t use stupid crap like glass for side panels, so you could mount a fan on the side panel and achieve the same thing.
To be fair both of my currently in use cases have glass side covers, but I’m liquid cooling. You can do it a lot cheaper than you’d think, maybe $200 is a lot for most people, never mind.
::presses down duct tape:: that's professional right there!
Pretty sure it won't do alot for the GPU temps.. but you should check the CPU and mosfets temp..
Warm air rises, would it make a bigger difference turning the fan around so it blows cool air in under your video card, the video card fans blow the air up and the psu blows the air out.
(Dust could be a problem depending on your environment.)
thats how I setup mine and I do see decemt results without having a server fan in there
I did this on a PC a while ago but I had the fan blowing in, try that see if makes any difference.
Is it possible if it works:
Make a fan hole at the right side of the case cover, back plate of the cpu, for additional cooler fan?
Based on youtube videos where people test pc case airflow using a smoke machine, the gpu sucks cool air from outside the case from the pci slot holes. Sounds weird but I guess that's how pc case engineers does things. The best gpu temperature improvement you could get is blowing air into the case rather than exhausting it. I don't have any test to prove this but it kinda sounds about right.
interesting... did not know that and may have to revisit this!!
Right that's what I was about to do, I will update you guys maybe tomorrow.
I just tried it and it didn't made any difference at all actually, my casing was perfect for to fit a fan near pci slots, But still it didn't made any difference when at full load.
But now gpu cools down much faster than before when unloaded the load.
But if warm air rises, maybe the fan should be mounted on top of the case?
i see this would be most beneficial if you're running more than 1 gpu inside your case with lots of hot air trapped inside the case
Tbf their are those solid front panel cases that are terrible. So I could believe around 8-9c.
They also kinda boost higher with lower temps untill they reach that point
i've put a tiny exhaust fan UNDER the gpu and it improved thermals by a lot
Over the slot covers/grills...? WhatTF are you thinking!??? Remove them already!!
That will give way more airflow and way less noise... you do realise that right..?! not too difficult for you to grock?
And no it wont help on a blower style cooler:
The warm air exhausted by you GF card ends up right back in the intake area, where it's recycled in a ever hotter loop.
The fan minimises that...
If you want a cooler, quieter blower style GF card; remove its grille already! Hellooo!!!
Actually janky since the cold air from the GPU (which is minimal already in most cases) is taken away from it. There should be better results with the fan blowing inside the GPU / creating FAN ducts towards the GPU aswell as isolate the GPU fans from the backplate where the air will be circulating back to the fans.
I feel like I’d probably take an an otherwise garbage oem 93mm fan and zip tie it to the back. I’ve done this before, zip tying an Amd stock fan to my pcie brackets. Doesn’t really do anything but it’s the thought. Also the last modern cards to come with blower coolers were 20 series
Replace the side panel with a standard household box fan.
That's what I use to do with my old athlon thunderbird computer lol
I agree that this isn't worth it. I've experimented with mounting fans in all sorts of places to better cool my gpu but I found that the gains were minimal.
Also should warn anyone that using a fan with too high rpm blowing towards the card could actually damage your card or card fan. This is a problem for cpus too. Basically you can end up spinning your gpu or cpu fan too fast, causing it to become a generator. That's why when you get a dual fan set up like noctua cpu coolers, the fans are identical and spin the same speed to avoid this problem.
Best option IMO is just adjusting the fan curve in MSI afterburner. I cooled an rx 560 from 83C to 70C, but most games it runs at about 66C. So a difference of 13 degrees, which was a lot more than any extra fan configuration. Most gpu fan curves are set up from factory to balance between cooling and quietness.
Aside from a custom fan curve, setting up an underclock helps keep it cool too. Both these options can work in tandem to cool better than extra fans, and not potentially turn your actual gpu fan into a generator. Lmao.
you don't show inside the case to see where improvements may be made. (like a better airflow case, more fans / better fans etc)
i do this , but the cooler fan not outside but inside, and so cool upto 5-8C i got improve
You can open the entire case and use a giant fan for the entire pc
Why didn't you try air blowing in the case not out?
You then suck unfiltered air right into your GPU
that's extreme Quality there Bro
🤣
so just scored myself a used RADEON HD 6450 1GB GDDR3 for my 530S internet browsing and youtube....for pennies on ebay....but the card does not come wit a fan on it.....touched the heat sink - was really hot could barely hold my finger on it....but put a small 5 volt .200 amp fan on it via usb made all the difference ...now it's cool to the touch. 530S not really designed for card like that :) so getting a usb fan probably costs as much as the card itself nowadays....but it works. now need to figure how to fit the fan on card....now it kind of just sits there #lolz
Use some type of sheet rock screws as it bites into the heatsink. I have a video showing that on the channel.
@@DLMtechgarage great idea....was thinking hot glue gun but not sure would bite to metal + metal getting too hot....but if metal stays cool might work..I like your idea though...
Get a case with a lot of ventilation to avoid drastic measures.😆
very true lol...
You got inspiration from Lian Li's Lancool 216 right?
honestly, I saw it on reddit first and after the video I saw lian li had that case.
can you mod a case so putting a fan in the back fits better
it would be tricky!!
Exhaust fans are awesome
It's stupid but thank you for trying and demonstrating it.
it really is lol...
@@DLMtechgarage and yet, there are still idiots out there who think it is about the number of fans in their case, even though having more beyond where you should (back a couple in front) does not lower temps by more than 3 C....SMH
@@PapaMav too much effort for negliable difference!
So true everything on the internet is true 👍
lol..
ig its one of those things you can try if you have a spare pc fan and don't kno what to do with it
The fact that there's now a case with this exact design
what case is that
@@StoneXue Lian Li LANCOOL 216 RGB, E-ATX Case, Mid Tower
Hah! I've done this before as an experiment and ya, it does work. It's just too ugly- I had the fan on the inside though. It was just a standard size fan (I think 80mm)
turn up your intake fans and have postive air flow....your welcome
Second one is a toilet fan
you installed it wrong if you put airflow side to your gpu its makes your card dirty but air make your card cool as hell
bro remove glas panel.i got 3080.and i get like 65 degres in like 2 haurs of gaming
Does it work? Yes. Practical? No. Someone on the internet comments, "oh yes it is because *insert angry comments here*. LOL
ha ha so true!!
you should tru to push the air in instead of sucking it out
maybe there will be better results
yea I might look into this again!
Just leave the side panel off, easy fix.
I tried both methods, temp dropped 1-2 degrees.
just what I was loking for.. thanks sir! But it didn't do anything 😐 Bigger fan maybe!
Air intake would work better imo
2~4 great improve
LianLi Lancool 216
Help me please I want this assembly
i7 4790
128 GB SSD
1 to the hard disk
10 GB RAM
with motherboard and PSU Mini Boîtier Simple
How much does it cost please
Im guessing 130-220 dollars depending on ur motherboard. If you are gonna get it through a dell optiplex build its gonna be on the chrapeiside. Also i dont think 10gb ram is possible since there aren't 5 gb ram sticks, unless you are mixing ram ofcourse WHICH YOU SHOULD NEVER DO. Settle for 8gb ram instead
@@JonLeonard wouldn't matter if he was mixing ram or not, there is no 10 gigs of ram unless he's got 10 ram slots at 1 gig per stick... which the actual number would be 10.240 gigs.
Why 10gb ? Shoot for 16gb
Try 12GB, not 10GB of RAM. '1 to the HDD'?
Get a nvme and a ssd for blazing speeds
Made for a great video though!
Thanks!
I prefer my PC whisper quiet...
But... My PC is 39dB under unrealistic 100% load
My whisper is 42dB
Cry ;_;
72dB
Your overall room is too hot. My card never reaches 70 even after hours. Add some fans in the room or turn on the AC.
my garage in the south is a bad combo.... gets hot!!
Lancool 216 this is standard
i lower my gpu from 89 c (closed) to 59c (open) with 2 fans on full load
wow thats a big difference.
@@DLMtechgarage I have a Q300L which is very high flow oriented
Devon, could U B more specific? Thanks
just undervolt the gpu for similar results.
And Your room sounds like a server Is it worth? NO!! (in my opinion)
Absolutely pointless lmao. 2 degrees are nothing, 5 is starting to getting interesting but having to deal with 50+ db is just beyond dumb.
loud or heat pick one
MOUNTING and TAPING are two completely separate things. Your lack of expertise in this basic knowledge invalidates your other opinions and results.
I did this same😆 its work for me also🫶