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Home Brew Hard Drive Silencer/Cooler

infodragon writes "As I was looking for ways to silence my system I ran across this article demonstrating a sandwich approach to silencing and cooling a hard disk. Quite a novel idea compared to other silencing techniques!"

17 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. A much friendlier solution... by anaphora · · Score: 5, Funny

    I always hold my drive between my legs while I'm using my system. The vibrations and heat lead to an enjoyable computer experience.

    1. Re:A much friendlier solution... by Gherald · · Score: 5, Funny

      > I always hold my drive between my legs

      and I thought 48" IDE cables were useless...

    2. Re:A much friendlier solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      ls -lR /

      Oooh yeah

      emerge sync; emerge -puv world

      Mmm, that's what I'm talking about...

      tripwire --check; tripwire --check

      Yeah baby! Once is never enough!!

      perl -e '$x[$_]++ for 1..200_000_00'

      Swap it to me! Oh yeah!!!

      emacs

      Oh MAN.. yeah... YEAH!

      startkde

      OH GOD YES!!! OH FUCKING YEAH!! UNNNNNNGGGGH!! YES!!!!!!!!

  2. mmmmm by hankaholic · · Score: 5, Funny
    demonstrating a sandwich approach to silencing and cooling a hard disk
    That's funny, I just applied the same approach to silencing and cooling some bacon.
    --
    Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
    1. Re:mmmmm by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Funny

      Your approach drastically shortens the life of the bacon, though.

      -- Dr. Eldarion --

  3. Easy solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Use a notebook hard drive with a 2.5 -> 3.5 adapter (and possibly a 3.5 - 5.25 adapter if you like). Less noise, less heat, less power. (Also less space and more money, but oh well).

  4. Commercial Silend drive enclosure by dgerman · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use them for 2 disks. The enclosure works well. It reduces dramatically the whining of the hard disk. The drive runs a bit hot, but within specs. The one in this machine has been on for several months now, and it is still going.

    Now I only buy barracudas.

    Silencing your PC is like getting into HiFi audio. The curve money spent vs. noise reduction becomes asynthotic.

  5. hard drives make noise? by leekwen · · Score: 5, Funny

    i've been using maxtor hard drives (diamond max series or something) for a while now, and i haven't heard anything from them since i upgraded my 2 giger many years ago. so i automatically assumed all modern hard drives don't make noise.

    what does make noise though are the 9 fans in my case. however, when i try to sandwich them i don't get the same temperature benefits like the reviewer does with his hard drive. oh well.

  6. Re:A nice article by imsabbel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    To bad that the thermal solution of every hardisc is optimized to transfer heat to the sides. The botton wont have any contact with the aluminium because of the circuit board, thus cutting off airflow and heating the chips even further, while the top of the HD consists of a thin sheet of metal that doesnt get much heat.

    It would be MUCH more useful to use some heatsink stripes like from an amp, but them on both SIDES of the drive and put it into a 5.25" bay.

    --
    HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
  7. Frankly...I like the noise by number_man · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It has a soothing, droning quality. In my home (office) I have a PC that sounds like a harrier (sp) in the midst of full-throttle vertical take-off.

    It has a desperate need for cooling with two athlons, four hard drives and two cd/dvd media drives (in a mid-size tower) -- I need all the fans I can get...

    Anyway, I like the noise...It gives me a sense of controlling some level of power, power that requires this level of noise to tame...

  8. Re:How freakin' loud are your systems? by fishbowl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sure this is an unusual situation, but if you have to use a computer in the same room as a recording mic, it's trouble. I don't know why everyone else wants quiet computers, but I certainly know why film and audio folks need them.

    There is a whole level of "silence" to film foley guys, they really WILL hear a pin drop and it will be an expensive problem.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  9. Working aluminum by The+FooMiester · · Score: 4, Informative

    Aluminum can be cut with a medium tooth blade and a jigsaw. It drills VERY easily as it is soft. Not so soft, however, as to be unable to take threads. You can do it with some scraps of aluminum at home even with modest tools. If you cut threads into the holes you could do away with the nuts on the backside and not have any bolt sticking out.

    I don't reccomend using aluminum for this project, however. It would be much better to do it with copper, as it conducts heat better, is denser(even more sound dampening), and you won't have an issue with galvanic corrosion like you will with aluminum on steel parts.

    Copper is softer than aluminum, so you'd have to bolt it thru as shown in the picture.

    --
    The previous has been a secret message to my comrades.
  10. Penny wise... by MarkusQ · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Bottom Line: My HD sandwich works well. It quiets the HD substantially, keeps it much cooler, and cost me just US$12 to implement.

    If you don't count the roughly $11,368.43 of his time spent on implementing, testing, and documenting the solution. I suspect he's an engineer. A programmer would wrap a towel around the drive, pause for a moment, and then say "Yeah, that's quieter." (Note: this is not speculation. I've have seen this.)

    It takes an engineer to cook up something like this and then spend 10x the effort to figure out how many dB reduction there was.

    -- MarkusQ

  11. Noise cancellation... by Atomic+Frog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your fan can be always on, as can be your hard drive. The point being, it's a constant, steady noise source, which makes a perfect candidate for active noise cancellation.

    Anyone tried it yet? Just record a sequence from your computer, then play it back and keep adjusting the phase until everything's quiet.

  12. Still necessary? by iamhassi · · Score: 5, Informative
    The overclockers.com article was dated 2001, who knows how long before that the actual enclosure was built, but it seems to me that modern drives aren't as loud as they use to be.

    Manufactures have now addressed the noise issue and 7200rpm 120+ gig drives can be purchased that are quieter than a whisper @ 10 feet; whisper = 3 bels, or 30db (decibels = tenths of a bel). Sure it does nothing for the heat, but I think hard drive enclosures are a thing of the past, unless you're holding on to that old 6.4gig drive.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  13. Gap filler by Dr.+Mu · · Score: 4, Informative
    From the article:
    "There are significant air gaps between the HD and the metal plates on both sides of the HD. I did not consider using thermal compound - the gaps are too big."
    That's why Bergquist makes their Gap Pad product. I've used it in other applications, and it works. Plus, its cushy resiliency should knock another dB or two off the sound level.
  14. Computer Silence by rMortyH · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work in a computer music and acoustics research lab and we're always after a quieter PC. We've considered a solutions like this, but we've decided it wouldn't really be necessary for long. Here's why.

    Among the many reasons for having a hard drive in every computer, two of the big ones were the Microsoft vision statement, and the fact that the network was much slower than disk. The latter is no longer the case.

    The fact that network is now faster than local disk is a MAJOR development.

    We've experimented with RedHat 9 with nfs root on older hardware with no disk and no fans, with 100Mb bootable NICs. We found to our surprise that they ran faster than with standard (non UDMA) ide. So, we're trying it now with newer hardware and gigabit, and some BIG heatsinks. So far, so good. We can optimize the central storage for speed, and the systems do, in fact, run noticeably faster in most cases, in addition to being nearly* silent.

    We hadn't counted on the added bonuses, but there are many. We can change an entire system disk by moving dirs, reexporting, and booting the machine up. Poof, new system. We can install and uninstall packages on machines while they're off! We no longer have two or three extra gigs on each machine, all our nfsroots are from a single physical filesystem (so far) so they all have the same amount of free space, much more efficient! And if a machine offends you, you can yank the plug out. No local fsck!

    *Note that the machine is never truly silent. Without any fans or disks, you can still hear a certain noise that sounds like it's happening when the disk used to seek. It's the toroids in the power supply! The network traffic causes HF noise in the power lines, which is filtered in the power supply and causes the chokes to vibrate slightly. The noise is very low, it would easily be drowned out by the quietest of fans, but in a totally silent room with no other PC sound, it's quite audible. There is also some low and infrequent clicking while the machine is warming up and cooling down, due to the thermal expansion of the heat sinks. This doesn't happen during use, when the temperature is more or less constant.

    I'm supposed to document all this and I've been lazy, so if you want the rundown on booting redhat 9 without a hard drive, write to my spare address (snotius@hotmail.com) and I'll finish the page and send you the link.

    =mortimer