Welp, im finally starting to reach the point of satisfaction with my p150, so I decided it would be a good idea to show it off.
Specs:
DFI|NF4 LANPARTY UT nF4 SLI-DR - 6/23/05 BIOS
AMD Athlon64 3200+ Venice (e3) @ 2.7 (270x10) ~1.57v
2x1024MB OCZ PC3200 Platinum @ 2.5-3-3-8 @ 2.8v vdimm @ 225mhz (5/6 divider)
eVGA 7800 GT 256-P2-N518, 496/1220
Samsung Spinpoint 160GB SATA (8MB cache) (NIDEC)
Pioneer A07 DVD+/-RW Drive
Antec NeoHE430 430W
XP-90
Zalman Northbridge Cooler ZM-NB47J
Artic Silencer rev3
Nexus DampTek
As you can see, the system is overclocked quite a bit.
Idle system temps:
Ambient temp: 23c
92 nexus (for cpu) @ ~1150
120 nexus (exhaust) @ ~1070
CPU: 29-30C
PWM IC: 40-41c
CHIPSET: 50c
After 10hr prime:
CPU: 45c
PWM IC: 45c
CHIPSET: 56c
Zalman (nb47j):
The stock dfi chipset fan was ridiculously loud, so I decided to go passive. In order to use the nb47 I had to move my 7800gt to the 2nd pcie slot and run it at 8x. No loss in performance that I can notice, and temps only increased slightly.
Artic silencer:
Not much to say here. No problems with it whatsoever.. installation was a breeze. Beats the hell out of the stock cooler, and shoots the heat right out the back.
Neo:
A pleasant surprise. I don’t know if I got the revision or not, but its working flawlessly with my dfi. I’ve never owned a seasonic, so I can’t compare there, but I do own a smartpower 2.0 and it definitely beats that (by far). The x-connect style power connectors make cable management a breeze. In short, I love it. I removed the grill, but I don’t notice any difference. Things were pretty quiet to begin with.
Damptek:
I can’t say I don’t regret buying this. It took away some of the whoosh, but that is about it. If I had to do it over, I wouldn’t buy it.
PSU Duct: I made it out of some thick paper I had laying around. PSU doesn’t rev up like it did before when things got hot. I think it may have increased CPU and PWM IC temps a bit, but I can’t tell for sure. I used some gauze I had laying around as dust deterrence.
Nexus soft mount:
I used 4 rubber grommets from a Sonata II hdd tray (the black ones) and 4 from a p150 hdd tray (clear ones). Used the black ones on the back and the clear ones on the inside (between fan and case). I ran some tiny zip ties through to keep it all together, and 2nd zip ties to secure the end (see pic). I guess it helped… I didn’t really notice any vibrations to start.
I think that’s about it. Overall I’m very happy with the results. All I hear is a very slight whoosh which is kind of drowned out by the hum of my router. I’d have to listen carefully to decide if the system is on or off based solely on what I hear.
***Update***
I changed out the nb47j for a jing ting JTS-0006. The reason for this... the 7800gt in the 2nd pci-e slot was blocking the pci slot i needed for my x-fi extreme music. Now i can use both, as well as use the 7800gt @ 16x.
I'm running the JTS-0006 w/o the fan and temps are doing pretty much the same as the zalman. 51c idle and 55c after an 2 hours of Prey (a game).
One thing i do notice is that my CPU temp has gone up a bit. i kind of expected this as the JTS-0006 sits kind of close to the xp90.
Anyway, overall, i am happy with it. Installation was very easy... easier than the nb47j! Motherboard removal is required though (of course).
Pictures (click for a big1):
thanks spcr! comments/suggestions are welcome.