El Gappo
New Member
Yeah he's trying to get to 29,3xx posts so he can take back first place in omega's 3dmark06 thread.
Since thats how many posts the prerequisite is now, right omega?
I lol'd
11 left
Yeah he's trying to get to 29,3xx posts so he can take back first place in omega's 3dmark06 thread.
Since thats how many posts the prerequisite is now, right omega?
I agree. The only way I see caseless being practical is if you either run LN2/phase cooling or bench various components frequently and need to change parts often. Other then that, caseless setups don't look good and unless you have a fan blowing on the parts, is poor for proper cooling of passive components.I am sorry but caseless 1) looks ghetto as all get out, and 2) is not ideal for cooling. The second point may be moot if you liquid cool but then you have a mass of liquid cooled equipment hanging all over the place.
^^^ Actually caseless is better for cooling
Why wouldnt it be? All the components are out in the open and not squashed together in a case. It isnt pleasing to look at though
Exactly, it's all stagnant air. You need circulation for proper cooling. If you ever put smoke in front of the front intake fan, you will see how quickly air is moving around inside the case.Because heat resonates, it needs to be forced out. Caseless gives you no airflow.
[-0MEGA-];1407843 said:I agree. The only way I see caseless being practical is if you either run LN2/phase cooling or bench various components frequently and need to change parts often. Other then that, caseless setups don't look good and unless you have a fan blowing on the parts, is poor for proper cooling of passive components.
caseless, has and will always be better than cases for cooling. Airflow is 1. over rated and 2. easily fixed with a fan.
Yes, they do.That's called an opinion, broski.
Do Tech Stations look bad to you?
Nope, airflow is not overrated. You NEED at least some airflow in order to keep the passively-cooled devices, well, cool. Yes it can be fixed with a fan, but now how does a house fan blowing on a caseless setup look better then a brushed black aluminum case?caseless, has and will always be better than cases for cooling. Airflow is 1. over rated and 2. easily fixed with a fan.
Many of the photos posted here were without fans, and when I say you need fans I'm not referring to CPU fans.I don't think anybody runs caseless without any fans. You're argument is ridiculous.
Would you guys stop ninja posting on top of me it's pissing me off.
What temp dropped? CPU temps sure will as there is less air resistance in a caseless setup, however again, any passive-cooled device will get hotter.When I moved from my Antec 900 to my Antec 900 motherboard tray my temperatures did indeed drop a couple of celsius.
With the same heatsink, clocks, etc.
[-0MEGA-];1407871 said:Many of the photos posted here were without fans, and when I say you need fans I'm not referring to CPU fans.
.
[-0MEGA-];1407871 said:Yes, they do.
Nope, airflow is not overrated. You NEED at least some airflow in order to keep the passively-cooled devices, well, cool. Yes it can be fixed with a fan, but now how does a house fan blowing on a caseless setup look better then a brushed black aluminum case?
Many of the photos posted here were without fans, and when I say you need fans I'm not referring to CPU fans.
What temp dropped? CPU temps sure will as there is less air resistance in a caseless setup, however again, any passive-cooled device will get hotter.
Looking at the first few pages showed these, looks like the majority ARE powered on when the photos were taken.Most of those system's aren't powered on, they are just naked for a pretty pic.
Go update your super pi thread wench.
That would explain why you have those temps then, again it all depends on if you have circulation in your room and if other fans are placed where they will circulate the air around. However I bet if you look at your hard drives (if they aren't near a fan), those temps would have increased. Not right away, but if you leave your system on for a while the stagnant air will slowly increase in temperature.Yeah, my CPU and GPU dropped, but I didn't notice any noticeable increase in temperatures in any of my passively cooled parts like my northbridge.
My CPU heatsink's fan already produced enough airflow in its general direction to sort that, even at high voltages.
Edit: Also, my pic is with a fan, you just can't see it.
I have my hard drives in a Lian Li hard drive bay, with an 80mm fan on the front.[-0MEGA-];1407886 said:Looking at the first few pages showed these, looks like the majority ARE powered on when the photos were taken.
http://www.computerforum.com/1405547-post14.html
http://www.computerforum.com/1405794-post31.html
http://www.computerforum.com/1406546-post47.html
And I'll update the thread when I am good and ready.
That would explain why you have those temps then, again it all depends on if you have circulation in your room and if other fans are placed where they will circulate the air around. However I bet if you look at your hard drives (if they aren't near a fan), those temps would have increased. Not right away, but if you leave your system on for a while the stagnant air will slowly increase in temperature.
Not to mention all the dumb risks you take running casesless systems, you are tossing out the protection of a case. Hope you don't have any pets and run caseless.
Hope you don't have any pets and run caseless.
There is no convincing these guys, they are simply stuck in their ways.It is basic science and physics. Heat expands (thermodynamics) and resonates around but will transfer over to cooler areas over time. See the second law of thermodynamics if you want to get the nitty gritty of it. Heat cannot flow by itself, it resonates. In a case you have intake and exhaust and are forcing the heat out on all your components. Unless you have high speed fans forcing air on every component on your "caseless" set up, you are not getting rid of all the heat.
Of course, if you are using a liquid cooling system you are probably using way less forced air and possibly no fans, so I did make an exception for that.
Also the first law of thermodynamics states that in any isolated system heat is a constant, so we know it is going to be there.
Now take into consideration that every hardware engineer designs computer hardware to be put in a case, therefore, they are designed with the idea of efficient cooling by it being in a case.
Not to mention all the dumb risks you take running casesless systems, you are tossing out the protection of a case. Hope you don't have any pets and run caseless.