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  3. Tired of noisy hard disks?

Tired of noisy hard disks?

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  • E El Corazon

    try some of the tips from here: http://www.nvnews.net/articles/quietsli/index.shtml[^]

    _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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    toxcct
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    wowww, nice !! :-D


    You don't know where to start ? ask a good friend

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    • E El Corazon

      try some of the tips from here: http://www.nvnews.net/articles/quietsli/index.shtml[^]

      _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

      D Offline
      D Offline
      Dario Solera
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      My VGA cooler is already supposed to be silent (18dB)...

      ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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      • D Dario Solera

        Noisy disks are very annoying, so I bought a couple of meters of elastic tissue stripes, and mounted the disks sot they're "floating" (thanks to a friend's suggestion). Awesome, really! No vibrations, no noise, just sweet silence. :cool: Now I have to reduce the noise of the GPU fan (I already replaced the default fan with this one[^], but it's not enough :rolleyes: )...

        ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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        Paul Watson
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Noise is a big issue (I have tinnitus from being around noisy computers too long) and I have to say I am very impressed with this MacBook Pro. My previous HP laptop was a noisy critter, if it had started hovering I wouldn't have been surprised. The only time I have heard the MacBook Pro emit any hardware noise is once after playing an hour of Battlefield 2142 with the laptop on a duvet (so blocking most of the airways.) Other than that it is silent.

        regards, Paul Watson Ireland FeedHenry needs you

        Shog9 wrote:

        eh, stop bugging me about it, give it a couple of days, see what happens.

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        • D Dario Solera

          My VGA cooler is already supposed to be silent (18dB)...

          ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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          E Offline
          El Corazon
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Dario Solera wrote:

          My VGA cooler is already supposed to be silent

          Then your best bet is to invest in a noise monitor and find all the noisy points on your computer, and lower them one at a time in order from loudest to quietest. :) Just like programming, improve the things that need the most improvement first. :)

          _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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          • D Dario Solera

            Noisy disks are very annoying, so I bought a couple of meters of elastic tissue stripes, and mounted the disks sot they're "floating" (thanks to a friend's suggestion). Awesome, really! No vibrations, no noise, just sweet silence. :cool: Now I have to reduce the noise of the GPU fan (I already replaced the default fan with this one[^], but it's not enough :rolleyes: )...

            ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

            D Offline
            D Offline
            Dan Neely
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            buy a waterblock, a pump, a 120mm rad, a silent 120mm fan, and a few yards of tubing. Adding a resivoir to the setup will help with bleeding the system, so I recomend one as well, and at the point of blowing $200 already you might as well get a CPU block as well to replace that fan as well.

            -- Rules of thumb should not be taken for the whole hand.

            D realJSOPR 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • D Dan Neely

              buy a waterblock, a pump, a 120mm rad, a silent 120mm fan, and a few yards of tubing. Adding a resivoir to the setup will help with bleeding the system, so I recomend one as well, and at the point of blowing $200 already you might as well get a CPU block as well to replace that fan as well.

              -- Rules of thumb should not be taken for the whole hand.

              D Offline
              D Offline
              Dario Solera
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              dan neely wrote:

              blowing $200 already you might as well get a CPU block as well to replace that fan as well

              I spent 4.10 Euros for the stripes...

              ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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              • D Dan Neely

                buy a waterblock, a pump, a 120mm rad, a silent 120mm fan, and a few yards of tubing. Adding a resivoir to the setup will help with bleeding the system, so I recomend one as well, and at the point of blowing $200 already you might as well get a CPU block as well to replace that fan as well.

                -- Rules of thumb should not be taken for the whole hand.

                realJSOPR Offline
                realJSOPR Offline
                realJSOP
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Bzzzzzt! Thanks for playing, but your advice about reservoirs is absolutely wrong. Reservoir cons: - It's $20-$40 on top of your other water colling expenses - It's just another possible leak point (especially those plastic ones - don't over-tighten those fittings - You need to find room for it in your case (I have an 18-inch aluminum cude case and couldnt find a decent place for a reservoir) - It degrades the flow/pressure efficiency of your cooling loop - It provides absolutely no cooling advantages. The best fill method is a T-line. Sure, it takes a lot longer to "fill" the system, but you don't lose pressure/flow, and the end result is more important than convenience.

                "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
                -----
                "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                • D Dario Solera

                  Noisy disks are very annoying, so I bought a couple of meters of elastic tissue stripes, and mounted the disks sot they're "floating" (thanks to a friend's suggestion). Awesome, really! No vibrations, no noise, just sweet silence. :cool: Now I have to reduce the noise of the GPU fan (I already replaced the default fan with this one[^], but it's not enough :rolleyes: )...

                  ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  Be careful, you don't know how long they will last then there will be one loud sound as it hits the bottom of the case. There are proper hard drive mounts which will last (I have found Nexus products to be good). Elaine :rose:

                  The tigress is here :-D

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                  • D Dario Solera

                    Noisy disks are very annoying, so I bought a couple of meters of elastic tissue stripes, and mounted the disks sot they're "floating" (thanks to a friend's suggestion). Awesome, really! No vibrations, no noise, just sweet silence. :cool: Now I have to reduce the noise of the GPU fan (I already replaced the default fan with this one[^], but it's not enough :rolleyes: )...

                    ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    Member 96
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    You could always turn up the music. I've found that there isn't much that gets through a few hundred watts on the desktop.

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                    • L Lost User

                      Be careful, you don't know how long they will last then there will be one loud sound as it hits the bottom of the case. There are proper hard drive mounts which will last (I have found Nexus products to be good). Elaine :rose:

                      The tigress is here :-D

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      Dario Solera
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Trollslayer wrote:

                      you don't know how long they will last then there will be one loud sound as it hits the bottom of the case

                      I have 4 disks, so the biggest jump thay can do is about 1 cm... they probably wouldn't notice it, even if they're running. Anyway, the stripes are very strong (they're used for dresses, you know, skirts and the like :-O ).

                      ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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                      • D Dario Solera

                        Rage wrote:

                        Can't they overheat ?

                        I don't think so... in my case they were mounted with plastic slides, so they were already "isolated" from the case. Anyway, if the stripes are not too much wide, I think that there should not be problems.

                        ________________________________________________ Personal Blog [ITA] - Tech Blog [ENG] Developing ScrewTurn Wiki 2.0 (1.0.9 is out)

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                        peterchen
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        Good thermal contact to the case can do a lot more. Some drives look specifically designed to transfer heat through the mounting screws. And all drives get smoking hot nowadays! With free air mounting, you need very good airflow aorund them. Zhe idea is cute, though :) For my mid-range graphics card, I paid ca. €25 extra for passive cooling. Good investment.


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                        • R Rage

                          Dario Solera wrote:

                          mounted the disks sot they're "floating" (thanks to a friend's suggestion).

                          Sounds interesting. Can't they overheat ?

                          ~RaGE();

                          I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus

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                          Brian Bartlett
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          If you are depending on thermal conduction to the case to cool your drives, you are already in trouble. In an external eSATA/Firewire/USB case, yeah, conduction is an issue for drive cooling. Inside a computer case, the air-flow is 'supposed' to be taking care of heat build-up. There are a few notable exceptions to that (laptops being huge here when I worked on them), but I can see using this solution to drive noise. Rubber grommets would also work. The US Navy uses much the same thing to reduce noise conduction in submarines ans some of the modern surface ships and what they work with is a heck of a lot bigger. I know! Submarine main engine turbines in nuclear submarines are huge. In the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, everything down to the smallest motor/pump is mounted on rubber stand-offs from what I heard.

                          -Bri "The most deadly words for an engineer. 'I have an idea.'"

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