Help with Dell Dimension L566cx

Info & chat about quiet prebuilt, small form factor and barebones systems, people's experiences with vendors thereof, etc.

Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee

Post Reply
fancontrol
Posts: 291
Joined: Mon Feb 10, 2003 11:19 am

Help with Dell Dimension L566cx

Post by fancontrol » Wed Oct 29, 2003 5:32 pm

My wife and I are going to share the office (once I get the desk done) and the noise from her Dell drives me nuts. I haven't had a chance to dig into it (working on the desk instead), but would like to know where to start once I get the chance.

Fans are the obvious first choice. With such a slow processor I wonder if I could go totally passive on the CPU? Any thoughts on power supply vs. exhaust fan? I want to keep the mods to a minimum for cost and time reasons. Tell me what you think.

Thanks for your help.
-fc

Ralf Hutter
SPCR Reviewer
Posts: 8636
Joined: Sat Nov 23, 2002 6:33 am
Location: Sunny SoCal

Post by Ralf Hutter » Thu Oct 30, 2003 5:11 am

What are the specs of that Dell?

If it's a newer one I'd be careful about blindly changing out fans and such. They seem to be pushing the thremal envelope with the factory installed ventilation and changing to lower speed fans may put you over the top, temperature wise.

If it's an earlier version you may have some working room. The earlier Dell's (PIII and back) seem to be over-fanned for what's inside of them. Be careful though, those Palo Alto cases don't have very good airflow so you may need to keep some fairly decent fannage in there to keep things cool enough.

The earlier Dells are also a lot more proprietary than the newer ones. You won't be able to swap out the PSU, for instance, unless you do your home work and even then it might not work.

Some of the Dell fan connectors are also proprietary, even on the newer Dells. They seem to be tied into a (non-disableable of course. This is Dell afterall!) BIOS circuit and the system won't boot if you just unplug them and try to replace them with something different, even if you adapt the original plug to the new fan.

Post Reply