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#41
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But are they quiet, quiet, quiet? The difficult question to answer,
even if you have noise level specs for fans, is how much of a difference will I notice when compared to my just plain off-the-shelf parts computer? Yes - my DAWs are quieter than the average off-the-shelf computer. Obviously, this would depend on the computer because some are louder than others. My DAWs are not as quiet as machines with no fans at all but these computers are pretty expensive. However, the fans in my DAWs are as quiet as they can be. Unfortunately, I don't have audio level ratings for my machines. There was a recent article in PcWorld on silent PCs - it may be online. Mike |
#42
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I'll start offering my DAWs with this case as soon as I can purchase it.
$2,500 is an outrageous price! Mike |
#43
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On 7 Jul 2004 09:13:40 -0700, Mike Cressey wrote:
But are they quiet, quiet, quiet? The difficult question to answer, even if you have noise level specs for fans, is how much of a difference will I notice when compared to my just plain off-the-shelf parts computer? Yes - my DAWs are quieter than the average off-the-shelf computer. Obviously, this would depend on the computer because some are louder than others. My DAWs are not as quiet as machines with no fans at all but these computers are pretty expensive. However, the fans in my DAWs are as quiet as they can be. Unfortunately, I don't have audio level ratings for my machines. There was a recent article in PcWorld on silent PCs - it may be online. Mike www.endpcnoise.com has a number of articles discussing the trade-offs. Their solutions tend to be conservative, but they DO have reasonable justification for their avoidance of exotic cooling solutions. I found their articles useful for component selection, but their integrations are more generic "quiet machines" than purpose-built DAWs. The only "weird" thing I did was use a "too heavy" chip cooler--figuring (reasonably) that my machine wouldn't be moved very much, and only by ME who knows what to do to avoid damage. |
#44
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#45
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"U-CDK_CHARLES\Charles" "Charles wrote in
message I used an Antec Sonata Case modded with a Nexus (Dutch company specializing in low-noise air cooled supplies). and a Zalman copper flower cooler. Interesting. I have an Antec Sonata case with a Athlon 64 3200 inside. It's quiet enough that it's not audible when I bring it to the office for upgrades, compared to the office machines. Agreed. So far, my CPU core temp has yet to top 30C *knocks wood* I spent about $60 over and above the cost of a stock Sonata w/ the stock P4 cooler. I put a Zalman FanMate on the stock AMD cooler and slowly backed the fan speed off until the chip temperature started rising. Currently the CPU chip temperature is 33C with ambient at 78F. I can just barely hear any of the fans with the case at ear height, about 3 feet away. I got a bunch of FanMates on sale for $4 each, some time ago. |
#46
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1089219584k@trad In article writes: I used an Antec Sonata Case modded with a Nexus (Dutch company specializing in low-noise air cooled supplies). and a Zalman copper flower cooler. Is the Sonata the one that's fairly heavy aluminum, with a door on the front? Sounds about right. I saw one at Micro Center that I thought was very nicely made. The door is a PITA when burning CDs with software that opens the CD tray at the end of the burn. It was definitely Antec and Sonata rings a bell. Some problems with panels and the door buzzing. I've tried moving fan speeds around to avoid the resonances, but it looks like I'm going to have to find some Mortite... I guess that the good news is that mine has had no problems living at 80F. |
#47
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![]() In article scruffy writes: I figured it was safe too. I had a resistor in line with my ps fan for over a year. Nice and quiet. 2 weeks ago we had 3 days of 80 degree temps, unusual for our area. The ps overheated, blew it's fuse and took out the CPU in the process. Are you sure the CPU fan was running when the computer died? I used a 5.1V Zener diode to drop the voltage to my fan because it will drop 5V regardless of the current. As the fan gets crudded up or the lubricant dries out, it can require more current. A resistor will just drop more voltage and the fan may not start. Apparently there's a folk culture that does the same thing by (given a 12V fan) replacing the ground wire to the fan with a 5V lead from the power suppoly. This puts 7V (12 - 5) across the fan, at any reasonable current. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#48
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spud scruffy lad wrote:
I figured it was safe too. I had a resistor in line with my ps fan for over a year. Nice and quiet. 2 weeks ago we had 3 days of 80 degree temps, unusual for our area. The ps overheated, blew it's fuse and took out the CPU in the process. A different pc in the same building, one with the Invincible Bucket System Cooler is still bubbling along. s. Hmm... how about a resistor in parallel with a polyfuse? At normal temperatures, it's nice and quiet. When it gets hot, it goes up to full speed. I am becoming a big fan of the polyfuse things. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#49
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On Wed, 7 Jul 2004 18:31:21 -0400, Arny Krueger wrote:
So far, my CPU core temp has yet to top 30C *knocks wood* I spent about $60 over and above the cost of a stock Sonata w/ the stock P4 cooler. I put a Zalman FanMate on the stock AMD cooler and slowly backed the fan speed off until the chip temperature started rising. Currently the CPU chip temperature is 33C with ambient at 78F. I can just barely hear any of the fans with the case at ear height, about 3 feet away. I got a bunch of FanMates on sale for $4 each, some time ago. The cooler came with one, but I'm leery of putting a fixed device on my chip cooler. Right now, I have more problems with ambient sounds than DAW sounds, but I may look eventually at a front panel control or an automatic control if I ever have enough time or money to make the rest of my environment quiet. |
#50
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On 7 Jul 2004 16:53:14 -0400, Mike Rivers wrote:
In article writes: I used an Antec Sonata Case modded with a Nexus (Dutch company specializing in low-noise air cooled supplies). and a Zalman copper flower cooler. Is the Sonata the one that's fairly heavy aluminum, with a door on the front? I saw one at Micro Center that I thought was very nicely made. It was definitely Antec and Sonata rings a bell. Probably? The Sonata has a special single-fan version of their (iirc) Tru Power 380, which they also put in thier "BQE" version of their standard case. The Sonata is distinct in that the drives are mounted from below in removable trays on rubber grommets, sideways. I put the cables on the door side of the case. Their other case (SLK3700BQE) uses rubber grommets, but the drives mount conventionally from the side. The CD door is probably going to leave. It's the weak spot in an otherwise well-designed case. |
#51
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I have links to endpcnoise.com from my site.
BTW - my DAWs are less expensive than theirs. Mike http://www.MusicIsLove.com |
#52
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Is the Sonata the one that's fairly heavy aluminum, with a door on the
front? Sounds about right. I saw one at Micro Center that I thought was very nicely made. The door is a PITA when burning CDs with software that opens the CD tray at the end of the burn. I use Antec Sonata & they are well made. The plastic door is just a dust cover & can easily be removed. |
#53
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On 8 Jul 2004 09:13:38 -0700, Mike Cressey wrote:
I have links to endpcnoise.com from my site. BTW - my DAWs are less expensive than theirs. Mike http://www.MusicIsLove.com Yes, I only found them at all because they were linked as a source for low-noise components on some other site. Everything else I got from NewEgg like a normal persion. Only "troublesome bit" was my '465PE mobo has Firewire with the Agere chipset which I didn't know gave some periferals fits. The card with the TI chipset was cheap enough, but I had to pick through an entire Comp USA to find it--I couldn't find an online source that listed the chipset. But I like mucking about with systems, which isn't everyone's thing. |
#54
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Hi,
In message , Arny Krueger writes "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1089219584k@trad I saw one at Micro Center that I thought was very nicely made. The door is a PITA when burning CDs with software that opens the CD tray at the end of the burn. Ain't it just? I've managed to damage my Sony DVD burner because of that. It no longer opens or closes without assistance after it collided with the door during an automatic open. I'm guessing some teeth got burred off a cog while it tried to push the tray out. Still, it's an excuse to buy something decent. The damn thing never would work right with UDMA enabled. Seems to burn at 4x ok in PIO mode though. It was definitely Antec and Sonata rings a bell. Some problems with panels and the door buzzing. I've tried moving fan speeds around to avoid the resonances, but it looks like I'm going to have to find some Mortite... Mine's been pretty quiet (except when the side is off...which is most of the time at the moment). No buzzing, so I guess they vary in tolerance a bit. I guess that the good news is that mine has had no problems living at 80F. I wouldn't know. It's mid-July and London got 1/2 inch of rain today ... -- Regards, Glenn Booth |
#55
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U-CDK_CHARLES\Charles wrote:
The Sonata is distinct in that the drives are mounted from below in removable trays on rubber grommets, sideways. I put the cables on the door side of the case. I looooove this feature. You can actually add and remove drives without having to dig way down deep into the computer. For a while, I was dual-booting Windows and Linux on a machine in a Sonata case, and it was so easy to get at the drives, I'd just shut the computer down and move the IDE cable from one boot drive to another. (I finally stopped that when I wore out the IDE cable...) The CD door is probably going to leave. It's the weak spot in an otherwise well-designed case. It's a little annoying that it sometimes catches the CD-ROM and keeps it from opening, but I do like it since it keeps the noise down a little (especially while reading or writing a CD). However, I've noticed that it's not a problem (at least with my drive) if I leave the door almost closed but not quite; then the CD can eject just fine. One idea, although I haven't tried this myself, is to break off the plastic tab that holds the door shut. It's in the center vertically and on the outer edge of the door. If you break that thing off, then you should be able to close the door all the way and the CD drive should still eject just fine. And you'd still get a neater appearance and some reduction in noise when it's closed. By the way, I actually have two Antec Sonata cases, and the newer one is noticeably louder than the older one! The newer one has a power supply that has connectors for Serial ATA drives, so I think it's the power supply that is making the difference in noise. - Logan |
#57
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spud scruffy lad wrote:
On 8 Jul 2004 09:16:53 -0400, (Scott Dorsey) wrote: Well now I know what that thing is in my DAP-1 battery pack but how would that help the simple fan circuit I was describing? The polyfuse is normally closed- a short, if it were in parallel with my resistor is seems like the resistor would have no effect, being shunted out of the circuit and I would have noisy, full fan speed (but proper cooling) as a normal condition. When it got hot (which it wouldn't because the fan is roaring away) it would open and current would have no other path and finally start going through the resistor and I would then have low fan speed when I need full speed. We need the opposite to happen, right? I'm probably missing the boat here as usual. Thanks for your reply. You can get 'em with both positive and negative temperature coefficients. And also you can get traditional thermistors, which have a slow change in resistance with temperature rather than the abrupt transition that the polyfuse does. I'll see if I can dig up a data sheet around here. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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