I am using D300, and now considering TH-360 after watching this video. The 28T thickness of that AIO's fans seems to guarantee its cooling performance, but how about the noise? Especially about its water pump. Is it silent enough? I'm concerned about some AIO's disturbing pump noises, such as high squeaking noise or low hard vibration noise. I can't see any information about that pump on Jonsbo's official website. It seems to be launched soon, but not yet here in South Korea.
PSU takes fresh air from the bottom of the case and exhausts it directly to the rear. This separation doesn't let the heat of a PSU affect the air inside the PC case much; the heat of a PSU is cooled by the air passing though the heatsinks inside, those heatsinks are not connected to the cage of a PSU, and that air just leaves the case right after cooling a PSU. Inlet fan on the case's PSU chamber takes air from the bottom of the case, from the area not covered by a PSU; the bottom of cases like this are full-mesh, which provides enough uncovered area to take fresh outer air, and makes the air from the bottom fresh enough no matter how much the PSU cage heats up in between. The air just flowing over the outer surface of a PSU may get a little hotter, but never hotter than the PC components inside. You may need to add some outer heatsinks on a PSU for that to happen. It seems you haven't built a PC recently.
I am using D300, and now considering TH-360 after watching this video. The 28T thickness of that AIO's fans seems to guarantee its cooling performance, but how about the noise? Especially about its water pump. Is it silent enough? I'm concerned about some AIO's disturbing pump noises, such as high squeaking noise or low hard vibration noise. I can't see any information about that pump on Jonsbo's official website. It seems to be launched soon, but not yet here in South Korea.
I think that the “fresh” inlet fan on to where the psu should be actually are putting hot air from psu
PSU takes fresh air from the bottom of the case and exhausts it directly to the rear.
This separation doesn't let the heat of a PSU affect the air inside the PC case much; the heat of a PSU is cooled by the air passing though the heatsinks inside, those heatsinks are not connected to the cage of a PSU, and that air just leaves the case right after cooling a PSU.
Inlet fan on the case's PSU chamber takes air from the bottom of the case, from the area not covered by a PSU; the bottom of cases like this are full-mesh, which provides enough uncovered area to take fresh outer air, and makes the air from the bottom fresh enough no matter how much the PSU cage heats up in between. The air just flowing over the outer surface of a PSU may get a little hotter, but never hotter than the PC components inside. You may need to add some outer heatsinks on a PSU for that to happen.
It seems you haven't built a PC recently.
@@user-eo1tw9ly8qare u blind or u type just for text something F dumbass ? He mount it upwards
Where did you pickup the AIO? I can't find anywhere that will ship that one to the USA.
One of their marketing reps send it over. Your best bet will probably be amazon when they make it available