
This marks my first use of an image hosting service...
The system consists of:
Antec SLK2650-BQE:
As of now the stock exhaust fan is wired for 5 volts. It is rated @ 1600 rpm/12v so I estimate its speed to be 720 rpm. I am considering removing the exhaust grille, but I do not have the tools to do it at the moment.
PSU is the Smart Power 2.0 that came with the case. Since ducting the CPU, the second fan on the PSU runs at low speed during heavy loads and does not contribute appreciably to noise.
The top of the case is lined with 2mm thick vinyl floor tile and the CAG is blocked. The rear tool box has been removed for better air flow. All of the 5.5" bay covers were reemoved to mount the drives. Three werre taped back in place after drilling for improved air flow over the drives.
All other stock openings in the case are open. Thre are no intake fans.
This is a small case and not all that easy to work in.
Cost: $70 including PSU
Abit KN8-SLI:
Mainly chosen for its passive northbridge cooler and low price. $110 at time of purchase and somewhat less now.
AMD 3800+ X2
Stock clock is 2000 Mhz. For the last day or so I have been running at 2599 Mhz, CPU 1.45v, chipset 1.6v, memory 2.7v, and hypertransport +4%v (4X mult).
This OC recipe ran more than 12 hours of prime 95 with two instances going. CPU temp was 49C in a hot 28C room. While running the prime 95 I surfed, viewed streaming video, and did some other disk intesive stuff without problems. It was the streaming video that led to the increase in hypertransport voltage. Right now the machine is running two instances of folding at home. Its 26.5C in the room and the CPU is 48C.
You may see some amazing numbers in overclocking forums, but those guys run prime 95 for 2 hours or super pi 32M without touching anything. That doesn't prove squat.
There is a Ninja Plus under the white cardboard duct. Due to the offset, it was a bit tricky to cut the duct. It would have been much easier with an Asus SLI premium, but I was too cheap to spend the extra $60. The stock Ninja Plus fan (made by Adda) runs @ 730 RPM. The duct made a big difference. CPU temps dropped 2C. The other two sensors dropped by 4C each. The powersupply, which used to go haywire after 1 hour @ 2500 Mhz now runs forever @ 2599 Mhz and does it quietly. If you think your PSU is borked, and it is not possible to duct the PSU, try ducting the CPU. It will do you a world of good, as Pee Wee Herman used to say.
2 Gigs of A-Data DDR400 memory. With the clock @ 260 the memory runs as DDR433 (bios setting DDR333). Stock timing is 3-4-4-8, but this stuff runs @ 2.5-3-3-7 with ease. However, it will not run much faster than DDR433. AT the time this was the cheapest 2 gigs of DDR400 I could find with heatsinks.
Video is provided by a XFX 7600GT maed to a Zalman ZM80D-HP passsive cooler. Idle temperature is dependably room temperature +26C, 52C right now. Maximum observed operating temperature was a momentary 73C running rthdribl demo with the AC off and the room @ 29C! GPU runs @ factory OC'ed 570 Mhz, memory bumped to 765/1530 Mhz.
Under Windows 64 3DMark05 runs around 6350. RMclock is used for power management, Everest for temperature monitoring and other hardware info.
Storage is from a pair of Seagate 160 GB 7200.9 SATA 3.0 drives in raid 0. However unpopular this may be with some members due to concerns about reliability, it really screams on disk intensive tasks like muxing DVD's. The drives are suspended using 1.5 mm Stretch Magic in the 5.5" bays. I chose this method as the material would fit through the small holes in the tool-less drive mounts without drilling. For $2 this was the single largest imporvement in my system. Prior to suspending the drives vibration induced noise was nasty. Threre is a 9 year old floppy in there for the raid bios.
DVD burner is an NEC 3550. It works nicely for burning DVD's but is not especially fast ripping audio, as it does not cache audio. OTOH, it works nicely in the EAC secure mode.
Special thanks to Chris Thomson and JMKE for insipration regarding the benefits of ducting, and many other SPCR members for the solutions they have documented in these forums. If you have never been to Madshrimps, go there now.