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#1
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
Hello:
I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 |
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#2
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
http://www.google.com/search?q=hard+...x=&startPage=1
-- ---- Crosspost, do not multipost http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375 "eli" wrote in message ... Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 |
#3
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
"eli" wrote in message ... Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 If you go here, you will get a good idea of what's available: http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCateg...-Drive-Cooling |
#4
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
Thanks. If I'm not mistaken, it seems that a "hard disk cooler" is
essentially a fan which is placed into the pc tower [excuse my computer naivetee]. I had a new fan installed last summer. Do these elevated temp readings suggest I simply need a better fan? Or am I misunderstanding something here...? TIA -eli ======================== "Ian D" wrote in message ... "eli" wrote in message ... Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 If you go here, you will get a good idea of what's available: http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCateg...-Drive-Cooling |
#5
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
eli wrote:
Thanks. If I'm not mistaken, it seems that a "hard disk cooler" is essentially a fan which is placed into the pc tower [excuse my computer naivetee]. I had a new fan installed last summer. Do these elevated temp readings suggest I simply need a better fan? Or am I misunderstanding something here...? TIA -eli ======================== "Ian D" wrote in message ... "eli" wrote in message ... Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 If you go here, you will get a good idea of what's available: http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCateg...-Drive-Cooling Everything in your cabinet produces heat. Things like the drives and the CPU are the worst. So the more cool air you can get in the cabinet and thus the more heat you can get out the better. This is assuming you are not running the PC in a overly hot area, beside the furnace? !!! So how do you do it? Make sure you not only pull air out, but push air in. There are fans that go in a spare bay too that blows air in there and of course it should be the slot right beside your drive. The manufacturer will tell you above or below. I've bought 2 more fans for my cabinet above the 1 in the back of the case and put one more in the back and one more in front. I don't measure the heat, I just know air is a good friend. $3-4 fans or 100+ for chip/drive. Seems brainless. There are even water coolers for cpu chips. :-) http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16835118015 |
#6
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
It is a fan that is attached to the drive itself.
"eli" wrote in message ... Thanks. If I'm not mistaken, it seems that a "hard disk cooler" is essentially a fan which is placed into the pc tower [excuse my computer naivetee]. I had a new fan installed last summer. Do these elevated temp readings suggest I simply need a better fan? Or am I misunderstanding something here...? TIA -eli ======================== "Ian D" wrote in message ... "eli" wrote in message ... Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 If you go here, you will get a good idea of what's available: http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCateg...-Drive-Cooling |
#7
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
"eli" wrote in message ... Thanks. If I'm not mistaken, it seems that a "hard disk cooler" is essentially a fan which is placed into the pc tower [excuse my computer naivetee]. I had a new fan installed last summer. Do these elevated temp readings suggest I simply need a better fan? Or am I misunderstanding something here...? TIA -eli If your HD is not in the airflow, a case fan won't do much good. How much free space is there above and below the disk. There are two types of HD coolers; fans that blow air through the disk bay, and coolers that attach onto the HD. A disk that is mounted by itself in the mid position of a disk bay with open room above and belot it shouldn't reach the temps you're showing, even without direct airflow, as convection should provide some cooling. |
#8
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
eli wrote:
Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 A temperature extracted by S.M.A.R.T interface, may not be accurate. Remove the side of the computer and touch your finger to the drive metal. My drive is lukewarm, and the measurement in Speedfan says "31C". (My room temp sensor on the computer, reads 22C, and the computer case air is 27C. The CPU is currently at 40C.) I place the drives next to the intake vents in the front of the computer. I have a single large exhaust fan in the back of the computer, blowing out. The majority of the intake air, comes into the computer via the front intake vent. By doing so, the hard drives do not get any recirculated case air. They only get room air flowing over the drive surfaces. Cooling is front to back in the computer, with no additional side fans to confuse the airflow. On another computer, I use an external intake fan, to blow room air over the hard drives. That computer case is much older, and has inadequate fans in the back. On computers where the drive temperature is as high as yours, usually the drives are sitting in a "dead spot", where no air circulates. To make my computer case work better, I removed the lower plastic bezel from the front of the computer case. I also removed the internal filters (a screen that slides out). That helps the air flow. You don't necessarily need to buy anything to fix this. And if the drive is lukewarm to the touch, it could be that the SMART temperature value is just plain wrong. Paul |
#9
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
Thanks again:
I think the fan which was replaced last summer was not specifically attached to the HD , but was simply placed inside the tower. The technician said that Dell often requires their own proprietary fans or something..He also said the tower was rather narrow [thickness?] limiting the fan choices... The PC is a Dell Optiplex GX 260 and the HD is: IC35L080AVVA07-0 Seems those temperature readings are lower today: ~49C, so a lot depends on what I'm doing at the PC. I'd like to speak to the technician about this, since I wouldn't know how to put anything into the tower myself. What would you suggest I ask the technician to do? What is it that needs to be put in so as to keep that temperature reading within a lower range? I'd buy the needed part(s) myself if I knew waht they were and have him put them in.... Thanks for bearing with me: -Eli ************************************************** ******* "Ian D" wrote in message ... "eli" wrote in message ... Thanks. If I'm not mistaken, it seems that a "hard disk cooler" is essentially a fan which is placed into the pc tower [excuse my computer naivetee]. I had a new fan installed last summer. Do these elevated temp readings suggest I simply need a better fan? Or am I misunderstanding something here...? TIA -eli If your HD is not in the airflow, a case fan won't do much good. How much free space is there above and below the disk. There are two types of HD coolers; fans that blow air through the disk bay, and coolers that attach onto the HD. A disk that is mounted by itself in the mid position of a disk bay with open room above and belot it shouldn't reach the temps you're showing, even without direct airflow, as convection should provide some cooling. |
#10
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
On Tue, 29 Apr 2008 15:39:17 -0400, "eli" wrote:
Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 Why ask HERE? This has absoutely NOTHING to do with the XP OS and as such is out of place in this group. Ask elsewhere |
#11
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
Thanks Paul:
I did install Speedfan 4.34, and its temperature does line up with what HD Tune reports. Charts--Fan Speeds--Fan 2 is marked as Red. Does this mean that that fan is defective or is not running at optimal speed? Thanks: -eli ************************************* "Paul" wrote in message ... eli wrote: Hello: I recently installed HardDisk Tune 2.55 [HD Tune]to monitor my Hard Disk: IC35L080AVVA07-0. I believe this HD was made by IBM The status readings for that disk are all OK, except for temperature ranges from 48C---59C. It's generally at about 51C but does go up gradually at times to 59. In Farenheit reading this would be: ~120--138 F The FAQ for HD Tune reads: " The temperature of the hard disk should not exceed 55°C/131°F. By default HD Tune warns you if the hard disk reaches this temperature. In this case it's recommended to use a hard disk cooler to extend the life of the hard disk" What exactly is meant by hard disk cooler, and how is this applied/installed? Can you give me some links for such products? What would be the simplest way to address this? Thanks in advance: -eli ============================== Windows XP Professional Edition Zone Alarm Security Suite 7.0.740.000 HD: IC35L080AVVA07-0 A temperature extracted by S.M.A.R.T interface, may not be accurate. Remove the side of the computer and touch your finger to the drive metal. My drive is lukewarm, and the measurement in Speedfan says "31C". (My room temp sensor on the computer, reads 22C, and the computer case air is 27C. The CPU is currently at 40C.) I place the drives next to the intake vents in the front of the computer. I have a single large exhaust fan in the back of the computer, blowing out. The majority of the intake air, comes into the computer via the front intake vent. By doing so, the hard drives do not get any recirculated case air. They only get room air flowing over the drive surfaces. Cooling is front to back in the computer, with no additional side fans to confuse the airflow. On another computer, I use an external intake fan, to blow room air over the hard drives. That computer case is much older, and has inadequate fans in the back. On computers where the drive temperature is as high as yours, usually the drives are sitting in a "dead spot", where no air circulates. To make my computer case work better, I removed the lower plastic bezel from the front of the computer case. I also removed the internal filters (a screen that slides out). That helps the air flow. You don't necessarily need to buy anything to fix this. And if the drive is lukewarm to the touch, it could be that the SMART temperature value is just plain wrong. Paul |
#12
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
eli wrote:
Thanks Paul: I did install Speedfan 4.34, and its temperature does line up with what HD Tune reports. Charts--Fan Speeds--Fan 2 is marked as Red. Does this mean that that fan is defective or is not running at optimal speed? Thanks: -eli Those are the color selections for the lines plotted in the chart :-) I have a fan which is operating just fine, and the color chosen is Red. So that is not a problem. My three fans read. Fan1 0 RPM (unused fan header) Fan2 2616 RPM (CPU fan) Fan3 1623 RPM (fan monitor cable from ATX PSU to motherboard fan header) My rear exhaust fan, is not equipped with an RPM sensor. So it would not register, even if connected to a fan header. My rear exhaust fan has only two wires, one for +12V and one for ground. The fan draws close to 1 amp. It is 120mm x 120mm x 38mm. I bought this from my local electronics (not Radio Shack) store. And yes, it is loud. (The version depicted here, has a third wire added.) http://www.circuittest.com/English/C...A1212038MS.asp Paul |
#13
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
Mine read:
Fan 1 0 RPM Fan 2 0 RPM Fan 3 0 RPM So perhaps their activity had somehow been disabled? The temperature of the HD is now showing at 51C If thats the case, can they be enabled from the Speedfan software? -eli ***************************************** "Paul" wrote in message ... eli wrote: Thanks Paul: I did install Speedfan 4.34, and its temperature does line up with what HD Tune reports. Charts--Fan Speeds--Fan 2 is marked as Red. Does this mean that that fan is defective or is not running at optimal speed? Thanks: -eli Those are the color selections for the lines plotted in the chart :-) I have a fan which is operating just fine, and the color chosen is Red. So that is not a problem. My three fans read. Fan1 0 RPM (unused fan header) Fan2 2616 RPM (CPU fan) Fan3 1623 RPM (fan monitor cable from ATX PSU to motherboard fan header) My rear exhaust fan, is not equipped with an RPM sensor. So it would not register, even if connected to a fan header. My rear exhaust fan has only two wires, one for +12V and one for ground. The fan draws close to 1 amp. It is 120mm x 120mm x 38mm. I bought this from my local electronics (not Radio Shack) store. And yes, it is loud. (The version depicted here, has a third wire added.) http://www.circuittest.com/English/C...A1212038MS.asp Paul |
#14
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
"eli" wrote in message ... Mine read: Fan 1 0 RPM Fan 2 0 RPM Fan 3 0 RPM So perhaps their activity had somehow been disabled? The temperature of the HD is now showing at 51C If thats the case, can they be enabled from the Speedfan software? -eli As a matter of interest, what are your CPU and chipset (motherboard) temperatures? Also, what happens to the HD temp if you run it with the case open? |
#15
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Hard Disk Cooler for Temps above 55C?
eli wrote:
Mine read: Fan 1 0 RPM Fan 2 0 RPM Fan 3 0 RPM So perhaps their activity had somehow been disabled? The temperature of the HD is now showing at 51C If thats the case, can they be enabled from the Speedfan software? -eli If you had no fans at all, your case would be "cooking". There must still be fans working in the system. Don't rely on software for the job. Use your eyes and ears. Take the side panel off the computer and have a look. Look at the back of the computer. There should be an exhaust fan on the power supply, and perhaps one additional exhaust fan, blowing warm air out of the computer. If Speedfan cannot locate the hardware monitor chip (read the detection log that is generated when the program starts), then there will not be any fans shown. If the fans don't have an RPM signal, then there is nothing to measure. That typically happens with "case" type fans - many have only two wires and lack RPM output. The CPU fan will usually have an RPM fan, and if it is hooked to the normal CPU fan header, then Speedfan should be able to see it. But that only works, if Speedfan can locate the hardware monitor. Speedfan scans the bus, for known hardware monitor devices. There have been some boards, where access to the SMBUS was made more difficult by the motherboard manufacturer (used two of them, and the regular one was not used). If Speedfan doesn't work, then look to the manufacturer of the computer, as they may have a utility to read out that stuff. But above all, use common sense. This is why I recommend using eyes, ears, and fingers, to bring some realism to measured values. If you can see a fan spinning, then it cannot be 0 RPM. If the case of the hard drive is only luke warm, then the temperature is not 55C. If the room is filled with the sound of fans spinning, then something must be working. In the upper left corner, I think I see an SMSC hardware monitor chip. http://auctionmechanics.com/photos/t...LotImg9789.jpg But someone here, tried out Speedfan, and things aren't hooked up the way that the program expects. Chip appears to be LPC47M534 (and so far, I haven't found any info on it). http://www.bugtrack.almico.com/print...php?bug_id=620 Paul |
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