On Saturday 05 March 2005 18:29, fire-eyes wrote: > On Sat, 2005-03-05 at 10:18 -0500, Ryan Sims wrote: > > On Sat, 5 Mar 2005 07:08:46 +0100, Volker Armin Hemmann > > > > > look for the temps in bios/with sensors. CPU>60�C check you fan. mobo > > > >35�C check all fans. Check your PSU, try the stick in a different > > > slot. > > > > Ahh....my CPU runs, according to my BIOS, usually between 70-80 degC, > > perhaps this is the problem. MB is ~34-35 usually, unless I'm running > > a long compile or a heavy game. Perhaps I need a new CPU fan.
[ all above this agreed on ] > Have at least one fan, on the back, as high up as possible. Two is > better, again on the back. You can go overkill with fans. Don't go overkill. Fans produce noise. > The thing to > remember is you want the same ammount of air coming in, as going out, to > get a good balance. Hehehe. This is a good one! > > If you have more air coming in than going out, heat will be held in. Gawd! Is it already 1st of April? (/me looking at the calendar.) No, it isn't. How do you suppose could that happen? You would end up with a case full of liquid air - and boiling liquid air, that is. ;-) Uwe -- Alternative phrasing of the First Law of Thermodynamics: If you eat it, and you don't burn it off, you'll sit on it. http://www.uwix.iway.na (last updated: 20.06.2004) -- [email protected] mailing list
