error_f0rce
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2006
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- 938 (0.14/day)
- Location
- Wisconsin, USA
Processor | Intel Core i7-930 (D0) @ 4.0GHz (1.28v) |
---|---|
Motherboard | GIGABYTE GA-X58A-UD3R |
Cooling | CoolIT ECO-R120 Advanced Liquid Cooling w/ x2 Scythe ULTRA-KAZE 3000rpm | Scythe Master controller |
Memory | Mushkin Enhanced Redline - 6GB DDR3 @ 1910MHz 8-10-8-29 |
Video Card(s) | MSI N460GTX Twin Frozr II SOC GeForce GTX 460 768MB 192-bit GDDR5 |
Storage | RAID-0 w/ 2x OCZ Agility 2 SSD 90GB SATA II 3.5" (r4.6Gb/s w4.2Gb/s) |
Display(s) | ASUS VW266H - 26" LCD |
Case | COOLER MASTER Storm Scout | x2 120mm Scythe ULTRA-KAZE | 140mm Scythe Slipstream KAZE Maru2 |
Power Supply | Thermaltake Black Widow TR2 RX - 850w |
i recon "blow more in" is the best way.. only cos u can blow it directly at some things.. its more aimable.. he he
but as a general rule.. in at the bottom front.. out at the top rear.. and what come in has to find a way out.. it needs to be "balanced"..
but a big extra "blow more in" fan stuck on the side blowing directly at my toasty1900xtx grfx card is what i have as well as the front and rear fans..
trog
The only problem with your theory is that regardless of how much air you have blowing into your case, unless it exhausts as fast, or faster than your intake, the hot air will still be trapped in you case. Back to square one...