HDD Elastic Suspension... Show your pics!

Silencing hard drives, optical drives and other storage devices

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Tephras
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Post by Tephras » Mon Oct 03, 2005 11:43 am

iSix wrote:It seems like I'm the only one who has a ground connection running from the drives to the chassis. Don't any of you guys bother about the static buildup on the drive from the constant high speed spinning?
There's no need for a separate ground connection AFAIK, after all, the drive is already grounded through the power connection.

iSix
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Post by iSix » Mon Oct 03, 2005 1:51 pm

Tephras wrote:There's no need for a separate ground connection AFAIK, after all, the drive is already grounded through the power connection.
Out of all the hdd's I've taken apart (I use the platters as coasters :)), I've yet to find a connection from the cast to any grounded point on the circuitry, it seems to be totally insulated from the rest of the disc. Maybe there is, but, TBH, I haven't properly looked.

wim
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Post by wim » Sat Oct 08, 2005 8:15 am

iSix wrote:I've yet to find a connection from the cast to any grounded point on the circuitry, it seems to be totally insulated from the rest of the disc.
have you ever tried a multimeter (ohmeter) between the HD cast and case... i've checked it a few times in the past but have stopped even bothering, they have always been electrically connected. and i surmised that the extra grounding thing, for example as zalman provides in their hd mount, is BS (but fwiw i've only ever used seagates, samsungs, and 1 hitachi drive)

iSix
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Post by iSix » Sat Oct 08, 2005 11:45 am

wim wrote:have you ever tried a multimeter (ohmeter) between the HD cast and case...
Nope, but I'll disconnect the extra grounding on monday and try it when I add 400GB #5 :)

ceraf
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Post by ceraf » Sat Oct 08, 2005 4:10 pm

Finally got around making a hard drive suspension, even though there was little need for it. Oh well, it was fun. =)

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Used some elastic rope-like material, like the ones used on the outside of backpacks. It seems sturdy enough. My only concern is about cooling.

MarvW
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HDD suspention?

Post by MarvW » Sat Oct 08, 2005 5:05 pm

There are some interesting solution here :shock: My solution was to get a P180 with soft rubber mounts. :lol: (not a pep out of the drives) I like it. :D

Irianta
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Post by Irianta » Sun Oct 09, 2005 9:38 am

Here'y my solution :) It's part of my efforts at building dual-Opteron workstations that don't sound like leafblowers. The cases came with two removable drive cages, and they're just the right size so you can suspend a couple of drives vertically. I bolted the two drives together just to make their installation easier, but even with the extra width the drives still hover few millimeters above the bottom of the drive cage.

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ceraf
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Post by ceraf » Sun Oct 09, 2005 2:50 pm

^ wow, that's a very good idea...I think i'll be doing that for future systems without a free 5 ¼ inch bay.

ChiBOY83
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Post by ChiBOY83 » Mon Oct 10, 2005 5:53 pm

Irianta wrote:Here'y my solution :) It's part of my efforts at building dual-Opteron workstations that don't sound like leafblowers. The cases came with two removable drive cages, and they're just the right size so you can suspend a couple of drives vertically. I bolted the two drives together just to make their installation easier, but even with the extra width the drives still hover few millimeters above the bottom of the drive cage.

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very curious tho as to how your temperatures are impacted bythis setup?? how much have your HD temps increased (or decreased) putting the hd's this clsoe together????

Techno Pride
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Post by Techno Pride » Mon Oct 10, 2005 7:49 pm

iSix wrote:Out of all the hdd's I've taken apart (I use the platters as coasters :)), I've yet to find a connection from the cast to any grounded point on the circuitry, it seems to be totally insulated from the rest of the disc. Maybe there is, but, TBH, I haven't properly looked.
Using the Samsung P80 as an example,

place one end of ur multimeter on one of the screws at the top corners of the drive, the other end on any part of your casing.

There is a connection.

Irianta
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Post by Irianta » Mon Oct 10, 2005 9:23 pm

ChiBOY83 wrote: very curious tho as to how your temperatures are impacted bythis setup?? how much have your HD temps increased (or decreased) putting the hd's this clsoe together????
That's a good question. Surprisingly, both drive temperatures have dropped 10°C, down to 28°C and 29°C in ambient temperature of about 25°C. It's possible that the 120mm fan sucking cool air over them...

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...has something to do with it 8)

I don't think I'd trust two drives that close together unless there was some effective cooling for them. In the planning stages I guesstimated that the intake fan would be sufficient, and it seems to have panned out ok.

sensei
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Post by sensei » Thu Oct 13, 2005 3:30 pm

I finally took some pictures om my HD suspension. It's really effective, but it still needs a bit of improvement...

sorry for the lousy webcam pics :)

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I'll be replacing the zip-ties with some appropriately sized rubber O-rings for better adjustability... I know the lower HD sits at an angle, but that will be rectified in time :)

The build is basically 4 vertical bungee cords, running through drilled holes in aluminium L-channel, and fixed with zip-ties. The drives are actually mounted with the original thumbscrews for the case. I didn't have an apropriately sized drill handy, so I made the holes large enough to accomodate the rubber grommets from the original drive cage. This also gave me some leeway if I didn't hit the exact right position (which I didn't)

My HD's are double damped baby!!! :twisted:

Oh yeah... and I DEFINATELY need to take some courses in cablegami... but then it's still a work in progress (isn't it always?), so I don't worry about it much...

timmytimmytimmy
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Post by timmytimmytimmy » Thu Oct 13, 2005 5:10 pm

Not exactly suspension. This is a Seagate 80GB HDD that vibrates a lot. I didn't hard mount it to the computer since it made so much vibration, that the steel panels would vibrate and resonate and drown out everything else. I resorted to putting onto one of the Antec drive sleds and sitting it on the bottom of the case, occasionally kicking the case to jostle the hard drive around if it go too noisy.

Then I saw bubble wrap lying around - and I thought, hey that might be good at absorbing vibrations. So, after about 5 minutes, I came up with the following:

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The HDD is mounted into the Antec drive sled, which sits ontop of the clear boxes which they ship hard drives in, and is held using the two red rubber bands. Inside the clear box is full of bubble wrap. The entire setup sits on approximately 3 layers of bubble wrap (approx 2cm thick). And it sits on the bottom of the case (thanks to mATX motherboard, there is plenty of space.

Probably not as good as suspending a hard drive, but it is extremely effective. Virtually all vibration/resonance is gone.

MikeC
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Post by MikeC » Thu Oct 13, 2005 6:51 pm

timmytimmytimmy wrote:The HDD is mounted into the Antec drive sled, which sits ontop of the clear boxes which they ship hard drives in, and is held using the two red rubber bands. Inside the clear box is full of bubble wrap...

Probably not as good as suspending a hard drive, but it is extremely effective. Virtually all vibration/resonance is gone.
Clever. I love ghetto modes that are simple and work. I'll bet this one does. ;)

timmytimmytimmy
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Post by timmytimmytimmy » Thu Oct 13, 2005 10:44 pm

MikeC wrote:
timmytimmytimmy wrote:The HDD is mounted into the Antec drive sled, which sits ontop of the clear boxes which they ship hard drives in, and is held using the two red rubber bands. Inside the clear box is full of bubble wrap...

Probably not as good as suspending a hard drive, but it is extremely effective. Virtually all vibration/resonance is gone.
Clever. I love ghetto modes that are simple and work. I'll bet this one does. ;)
Thanks. I tried putting elastic into the case to suspend, but the holes in the 5.25" bays don't line up, and since I can't mod it, I had to think of something else. Actually, the result using bubblewrap was much better than I expected. You should try it yourself. :wink:

edit: with the bubblewrap, the more the merrier (provided you have space for layers of bubble wrap

ceraf
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Post by ceraf » Fri Oct 14, 2005 6:25 pm

i've done something similar to that...i used some foam material used for crafts. Worked surprisingly well for my old, noisy IBM DeskStar.

hyperq
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Post by hyperq » Tue Oct 18, 2005 5:01 pm

The shortcoming of this settup is the lack of airflow to the bottom of the hard drive. Watch your harddrive temps with SpeedFan or some other temp monitoring software. Change the mounting setup if the HD temp goes too high.

agus_c_o
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Post by agus_c_o » Tue Oct 18, 2005 5:23 pm

hyperq wrote:The shortcoming of this settup is the lack of airflow to the bottom of the hard drive. Watch your harddrive temps with SpeedFan or some other temp monitoring software. Change the mounting setup if the HD temp goes too high.
a posible solution:

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Last edited by agus_c_o on Thu Nov 10, 2005 10:13 am, edited 1 time in total.

timmytimmytimmy
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Post by timmytimmytimmy » Tue Oct 18, 2005 9:50 pm

hyperq wrote:The shortcoming of this settup is the lack of airflow to the bottom of the hard drive. Watch your harddrive temps with SpeedFan or some other temp monitoring software. Change the mounting setup if the HD temp goes too high.
How important is it to check the temps? Before using the bubblewrap, it was just sitting on the floor of the case for around 2 months- no apparent problems. What do you define by high temps? The system is fairly low power, GeForce2 MX, Socket A Sempron2600+.

My hard drive (different computer-in my sig) hits about 48-49 degrees regularly, and its still going well.

agus_c_o
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Post by agus_c_o » Wed Oct 19, 2005 4:56 pm

timmytimmytimmy wrote:How important is it to check the temps?
check this:
http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=7677

matt_garman
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Post by matt_garman » Thu Nov 10, 2005 6:37 am

Here's a simple idea for owners of the Antec 3700AMB/3000B case. I don't think I've seen this before, but if someone else has posted this in the past, my apologies! There's a complete writeup on my website. (Note, though, at the time of this writing, the website is still lacking some polish and narration, but the pics are there---watch out though, the pics on the website are huge).

In short, I wanted something that was easier than Aphonos' frameless elastic suspension alternative---something that didn't require any modification to the drive cage, and was easy to get the drives level. (Note: some say it doesn't matter if drives aren't perfectly level, others say it's a must. Until there's a definitive answer, I'm sticking with the conservative approach, and personally making a requirement that it's a must.)

My first attempt was using "Stretch Magic", as you can see below in the next two pics. This is a quick and easy method to pull off, but very hard (if not impossible) to get the drive to level. If you look at the pictures, you can see that the drive actually unlevel in across two planes.
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So here's my current idea: use some kind of stretchy material (I used bungee cord in the following pics) to create two groups of two X's across the cage (the picture makes more sense than my verbage! :) ). You can see below that the bungee cord holds this drive rigid enough to meet my "perfectly level" requirement.

The biggest problem I see with this idea is that I don't have any protection for the shock cord. I had to pull the grommets out of the hard drive cage in order to fit the cord through the mounting holes. (I'm sure there's a simple way to protect the cords, I just haven't figured it out yet!)
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Finally, here's the same idea re-implemented with Stretch Magic. In this case, I definately need some method of protecting the cord from the cage (at least for the bottom holes). This job is pretty sloppy, admittedly, but it was just a proof-of-concept.

For what it's worth, I initially ran one length of Stretch Magic to determine how long the other three lengths should be. I came up with 42", which is really to short to tie once you get to the end. If I did this again, I'd probably use 50 or even 60 inches of stretch magic per run. That stuff is just too hard to tie if you don't have a lot of length to work with (and sweaty hands make it even harder).
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I haven't put this method into production yet. I actually found some side-mounting hard drive heatsinks that I'll use when this goes in the computer. Also, I need to find a better material (probably just go with smaller diameter bungee cord), and most importantly, some kind of protection for the cords themselves (protection from the rough edges of the drive cage that is).

Thanks for looking!
Matt

mshan
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Post by mshan » Thu Nov 10, 2005 8:34 am

Do those blue EAR grommets make any perceptible difference vs. the stock black rubber ones (in the hard drive cage)?

nici
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Post by nici » Thu Nov 10, 2005 10:10 am

Heres a pic of my suspension, i dont have a camera ATM so i cant take any better pictures. In short, i put some rubber u-mould over the 5,25" screw holes wich are pretty long and have sharp edges, then put three silicone bands in there. Its round 3mm thick 65 Shore hardness, medical grade silicone, rated to 265celcius IIRC. I used three loops because the HDD doesnt quite line up when i put the block of foam in front so it wasnt hanging level with four loops, i removed one from the front and it hangs level now, has been for about a month now i think :)

I think silicone should be much safer and more durable than rubber, and i think it looks neater too :) It shouldnt deteriorate over time either.

The foam blocks are Nexus Damptek blocks top and bottom, and one in front wich i took away so you can see the suspension.

The HDD is a 7200.7 pata 120Gb, temps are not that great but they should improve a lot when i duct the PSU so it sucks air around the HDD. If it doesnt ill add a undervolted 80mm fan near the hdd :) I already ducted my CPU so theres no fan on the heatsink, just he 92mm nexus at the back. Once i get a camera, and replace the ghetto-cardboard ducts with polycarbonate ducts ill post it in the gallery :wink: This suspended HDD is the noisiest part of the system by far, and i can assure you its pretty damn quiet :)

The suspension metod is not new or innovative in any way, i just havent seen anyone using silicone before, why? Its perfect for this.

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agus_c_o
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Post by agus_c_o » Thu Nov 10, 2005 9:18 pm

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Charles
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Post by Charles » Wed Nov 16, 2005 8:36 am

Hi!

What product do you suggest to cool and dampen two Samsung HDD-s in two 5.25" bay?

I mean like Nexus Disktwin, Silentmaxx X-swing and so on...
I heard Zalman HDC is not really worth the money.

The solutions like Nexus Drive-A-Way and Silentmaxx silentbox are a bit expensive to me, not to mention that I would have to buy two of them for the two HDD-s...

Thanks agus_c_o for the topic direction!

BR!

MikeC
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Post by MikeC » Wed Nov 16, 2005 8:47 am

Charles wrote:Hi!

What product do you suggest to cool and dampen two Samsung HDD-s in two 5.25" bay?

I mean like Nexus Disktwin, Silentmaxx X-swing and so on...
I heard Zalman HDC is not really worth the money.

The solutions like Nexus Drive-A-Way and Silentmaxx silentbox are a bit expensive to me, not to mention that I would have to buy two of them for the two HDD-s...

Thanks agus_c_o for the topic direction!

BR!
None of the above. They will do nothing for the main source of noise from the Samsung HDDs, which is vibration. The NoVibes3 or similar is the only thing which really makes sense. All the products you mention press too hard against the chassis; the rubber materials they use is not soft or resilent enough to stop all the transmission of vibration. You could do even better by making your own elastic suspension.

The only issue is that in the optical drive bays, suspended HDDs tends to get a bit hot because there's not much airflow up there.

nici
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Post by nici » Wed Nov 16, 2005 11:48 am

The Nexus Drive-A-Way is definately true to its name, its bye bye to the drive.. :lol: Even with a lot of airflow it barely kept a 7200.7 seagate at 50c :shock: The Raptor was even worse because the top is covered with plastic and thats were the, very minimal, heat transfer of the drive-a-way occurs.
And it didnt really improve acoustics either, plus its two(2) inches longer than a cd/dvd drive :shock:

Im thinking about making a birdhouse for one raptor and one spinpoint, with silicone suspension inside, and plastic duct from the house over the graphics card and out thru the empty PCI slots. I just need the wood, 22mm MDF is too thick and thats the only stuff i have atm. Dont want to do the laminate cardboard with fiberglass thing either, or then i just might.. i do have cardboard and fiberglass, hmm.. :lol:

Charles
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Post by Charles » Wed Nov 16, 2005 3:32 pm

The NoVibes3 or similar is the only thing which really makes sense. All the products you mention press too hard against the chassis; the rubber materials they use is not soft or resilent enough to stop all the transmission of vibration. You could do even better by making your own elastic suspension.

The only issue is that in the optical drive bays, suspended HDDs tends to get a bit hot because there's not much airflow up there.
Thanks for the suggestion!

I have looked all the cool work, which were done by the other forum members... My problem is that, in the Centurion, I cannot screw the elastic suspension because of the drive locking mechanism...

How can I get over this? Is is possible to keep the HDD-s in the 3.5" rack, and make the suspension there, somehow? There is my 8cm fan, which would continue the cooling...

I don't know if I can get this NoVibes3 in Hungary here... And as I looked it is quite expensive, too...

BR!

Charles
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Post by Charles » Thu Nov 17, 2005 6:02 am

So this is not god?

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This is better?

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A bad thing, that the later is 3x the price! :shock: :(

BR!

Ralf Hutter
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Post by Ralf Hutter » Thu Nov 17, 2005 6:55 am

Charles wrote:So this is not god?



This is better?
Absolutely correct.

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