Apparently ASUS is shipping out new chipset fans.
http://www.maximumpc.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=15693
http://www.maximumpc.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=15693
Originally posted by: Waylay00
Apparently ASUS is shipping out new chipset fans.
http://www.maximumpc.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=15693
Anyway, the point of this post was that somewhere or other A1bert had asked me to report my temps when I had the system up and running with the Swiftech MCX. However, since there doesn't seem to be a chipset thermal diode on the A8N, I'm not sure how I can meaningfully indicate how the Swiftech is performing. I suppose that if it is Prime stable over a few hours, and I can still hold a finger on the Swiftech pins, that will be as good an indication as I can give. I'm sure I read somewhere that the A8N does have a chipset probe but that you need to enable it with DFI's monitoring tool or something but I can't find the reference right now.Originally posted by: Tiorapatea
So far, these figures are only 13 minutes Prime stable:
10x250=2.5GHz @ DDR333 (DDR417 real), CPU @ 1.475V, Memory 10-3-3-3, 1T
Temps: CPU @ 44 degrees Celsius after 13 minutes Prime95
With 6800GT overclocked to 370 MHz core (1000 memory):
3DMark 05: 5083 marks
GPU temp after one hour of gaming: 60 degrees
olternat, as I mentioned before, a different solution to your's has already been posted in this thread. You replace the Asus HSF with either the NB47J or the Swiftech MCX, but before you do so, you remove a few pins on these heatsinks so that the NV Silencer will fit. You do not need to modify the NV5 and doing so is not advisable as you obviously already know. There is no real difficulty in removing the pins on either the NB47 or the Swiftech: they are made of aluminium and can be sawn off with a hacksaw or even snipped with wire cutters.Originally posted by: olternat
So no one with a solution to the nv5 silencer unmodified huh?
Originally posted by: vlad4
Originally posted by: Waylay00
Apparently ASUS is shipping out new chipset fans.
http://www.maximumpc.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=15693
I wouldn't really call these "new", they are the same ones that are currrently on the motherboards. Mine finally last week and the RMA department shipped out a replacement, (heatsink and all), but it was the same cruddy little fan. After ASUS told me that it could take up to 10 working days to reveive my replacement, I opted for the Zalman heatsink.
Since I'm running dual 6800 ultras, I had to trim 12 of the teeth down to clear the heatsink of the ultras. And just in case of temp issues I added a 40mm fan to the NB47J. It's a close fit but it works! Here are a few picts....
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/1.jpg
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/2.jpg
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/3.jpg
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/4.jpg
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/5.jpg
http://members.cox.net/vladimir/photos/chipset/6.jpg
Originally posted by: P0pinjay
Vlad,
Do you think this solution is quieter than the stock chipset fan and heat sink? Also, what are your new chipset and top vid card temps?
Thanks,
P0pinjay
Originally posted by: vlad4
I wouldn't really call these "new", they are the same ones that are currrently on the motherboards. Mine finally last week and the RMA department shipped out a replacement, (heatsink and all), but it was the same cruddy little fan. After ASUS told me that it could take up to 10 working days to reveive my replacement, I opted for the Zalman heatsink.
50C with 5V fan makes me think I should consider reinstalling that thing.Originally posted by: A1bert
[...]I've got the Swiftech's fan running at 5V and my temp sensor jammed in amongst the heatsinks pins - it reports temps of between 40C (idle) up to about 50C (HL2 for a hour or so).
I was interested to see your 3DMark05 results. I've noticed a big improvement since I moved over to the 76.50 beta drivers. With these and my 6800GT OC'd to 432/1160 I've managed to break the 6,000 barrier - just.
I think Futuremark are high-end video card salesmen.Originally posted by: A1bert
Tiorapatea - With my PC at its usual overclock and my GT at stock (350/1000) I get a 3DMark05 of 4921 so overclocking it to 432/1160 gives me over 1000 extra points - whether this actually produces a huge difference in games I don't know.
Is that 68C @5V with a 432/1160 overclock?! If so, I think that is pretty incredible performance and you (and I) could probably just leave the fan at 5V permanently. I was seeing 62C with rthdribl at 350/1000 so maybe I *do* need to redo the heatsink with AS5.Originally posted by: A1bert
I've just run 15 minutes of rthdribl and GPU temps peaked at 63C with the fan on 12V (68C with fan at 5V which is still not bad) and all the other fans on 5V.
Originally posted by: Choco140
Awesome!!! That's exactly the solution I have been looking for.
The only question is : how did you "attach" your fan to the Zalman? Is your fan a 40*40 model or 45*45 perhaps? What brand did you buy?
Thanks in advance for your answer.
Warning!!!!Originally posted by: afilis
I have the same problem...fan very loud...and all the things that other owners of A8N are experiencing....
I enable the q-fan from the bios..and this way..i cannot hear chipset at all...I'm getting 38-40C mobo temperatures...which was exactly the same as when the little ah heck was screaming..
I will monitor during gaming...but first indication..is that temperatures are not rising above normal...
Originally posted by: solofly
My solution...
http://img54.echo.cx/my.php?image=soloflya8nnb8wt.jpg
http://img54.echo.cx/my.php?image=soloflya8nnb27gy.jpg