Johannespaul
New member
I realized that this was the only thing I could do if I didn't want three (two in my case) 12 cm fans howling at the top of my case and a "should be an exhaust" fan blowing dust into my case. Even with that solution, the GPU cooling was still on the poor side. The thought of running SLI in this case was just hilarious. I realized what this case needed was what every serious case manufacturer is doing in a case like this, a side panel fan. These days in the world of smoking hot GTX 480's, you need a direct stream of air blowing directly on the GPU. I originally chose an NZXT 20 cm fan for the job, but the filters were dreadful looking. While looking for a filter to match the 800D's style I stumbled upon the Silverstone 18 cm grille/filter. This lead me to the Silverstone AP181 fan. This proved to be a great choice because the fan blows a focused stream of air across my video card and chipset heatsink dramatically reducing temperatures and GPU fan speed. The fan is also quiet and moves plenty of air on the low setting. This fan has allowed me to remove the excess top fans and make the exhaust fan an exhaust fan. I think the results a very good since the temps across the board either match or are lower than my previous case which was a Thermaltake Armour with the 23 cm fan (the previous version of the current Armour).
The idle temps are from the system running for 30 mins after booting up. The load temps are the highest observed temps from a 1 hr session of Battlefield Bad Company 2. All temps were from the side fan running on the "low" setting.




The idle temps are from the system running for 30 mins after booting up. The load temps are the highest observed temps from a 1 hr session of Battlefield Bad Company 2. All temps were from the side fan running on the "low" setting.