Patrick0525
Occasional Visitor
Cpu temp dropped from 75c to 57c using a PC 120mm fan blowing in from the back-side. It took 15 minutes. I was surprised using Merlin 780.65 for monitoring.
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And what is the reason and benefit of doing this if the chips in the router are build for temperatures above 100°C?Cpu temp dropped from 75c to 57c using a PC 120mm fan blowing in from the back-side. It took 15 minutes. I was surprised using Merlin 780.65 for monitoring.
And what is the reason and benefit of doing this if the chips in the router are build for temperatures above 100°C?
Just out of curiosity...is it drawing power from the USB 3 port as I can't tell in the pic very well. Thanks
I agree with your sentiments of needing to cool things. Pretty much very thing that has vents and USB I attach a fan to. With that I went the opposite and face the fan to pull out the heat of the router. Achieving the same results. Also, I went with the USB 2.0 port consciously as it allows me to have access to the higher bandwidth port when needed.It is drawing power from the right most usb port. I think it is 3.0 port(???), I visually can't get to it without shutting down the router.
Just because they are rated for that doesn't mean it SHOULD run at that 24/7. Heat stresses chips, period. Just cooling it down a bit, can extend life of the product.
...and may kill the router faster then the normal temperatures without cooling...!?I wonder how all the extra dust & crap that's now being forced inside the device will affect the internals.
I wonder how all the extra dust & crap that's now being forced inside the device will affect the internals.
My ancient, fanless, 10+ year-old ADSL2+ modem has ran scary hot with no problems. I opened it recently and it was spotless. No dust.
My PCs and other devices with fans get filled with tons of dust and require cleaning once or twice a year.
Now you're just putting more stress on your power supply. Which you can replace. I would still argue though that is longevity going to be an issue? Probably not. Your just using more power yearly with the added fan. Now if you saw extra performance from the lower temperature then ide say go for it. But i doubt u will.
Now you're just putting more stress on your power supply. Which you can replace. I would still argue though that is longevity going to be an issue? Probably not. Your just using more power yearly with the added fan. Now if you saw extra performance from the lower temperature then ide say go for it. But i doubt u will.
Cpu temp dropped from 75c to 57c using a PC 120mm fan blowing in from the back-side. It took 15 minutes. I was surprised using Merlin 780.65 for monitoring.
And what is the reason and benefit of doing this if the chips in the router are build for temperatures above 100°C?
Well, no. It would have to clog with so much dust that the temperatures with cooling were greater than the temperatures originally were without. It's highly unlikely....and may kill the router faster then the normal temperatures without cooling...!?
Well, no. It would have to clog with so much dust that the temperatures with cooling were greater than the temperatures originally were without. It's highly unlikely.
Aren't there other possibilities?
Shorts caused by dust? Hot spots? Other things I'm unaware of?
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