Hello,
As you might imagine, this topic has come up more than a few times in the past. Here's what I wrote the last time:
Neil wrote:
I'm of the opinion (based on my observations) that pulling air is much easier/more efficient than pushing it. Because nature "abhors a vacuum", and this principle causes the low pressure area to be "filled in" easily, and the air is put into motion farther away from the fan.
Pushing air into a case and increasing the pressure inside the case causes the air to "try" to go back out through the fan itself, since it is closer than the exhaust. This is basic fluid dynamics.
What it really comes down to is: your choice about how you want to deal with the dust, that is inevitably in the air. in order to cool the computer, you must move enough air through it -- and that air will contain dust, no matter how you configure the air flow.
With negative pressure, you can either:
* Clean it regularly, including any filter.
* Or limit/control the intake as much as possible, to force air to pass through a filter -- by covering as many openings in the case as possible, except through the filter. If you want this to be quiet, you must provide enough filter area, and the filter must be low enough restriction to not force the fan to run faster, but still be effective at stopping dust.
With positive pressure you can either:
* Clean it regularly, including any filter.
* Construct a larger filter that can pass enough air, even after some dust accumulates. If you want this to be quiet, you must provide enough filter area, and the filter must be low enough restriction to not force the fan to run faster, but still be effective at stopping dust.
Negative pressure can move air through multiple openings with one fan: some in the front (over the HD's) and some through the side/back onto the video card. It also often concentrates the air flow past the CPU heatsink.
Positive pressure is less able to cause air to move through multiple openings (see above), because of the way a higher pressure zone will dissipate outward in all directions -- and it will take the shortest path.
Another way to think about it: a negative pressure case is moving air into the whole room, where it easily dissipates; and therefore the fan only has to work against negligible pressure. A positive pressure case is moving air into the case, which is not going to dissipate as easily, and therefore makes the fan work against a little greater pressure, all else being equal.