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Hard Drive Cooling for 10 Cents

David Tiberio writes "I've bought many hard drive cooling solutions over the years, sometimes spending $50 or more on drive cooling systems that were noisy and did little to cool down the drive. After much tinkering, I discovered a simple solution that cost me only 10 cents per drive... the 1/2 inch bracket. Mounts any 80mm fan to the belly of an internal hard drive."

20 of 420 comments (clear)

  1. 10c? by ElPresidente1972 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Fan not included, I take it?

    (first post?)

    1. Re:10c? by brunson · · Score: 5, Funny

      I found a way to get huge performance increases out of my Saturn for only 5 dollars.

      I take this $5 towstrap and attach it to the back of this Viper... suddenly my 0-60 times are are cut in half and my mileage is through the roof!

      Thanks, Slashdot.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      Jesus loves you, I think you suck
    2. Re:10c? by heavy+snowfall · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No, but he's happy to tell you where to buy them.

      Approximate quote from TFA: "you can buy fans here ( http://www.anrdoezrs.net/click-1651435-54502),
      This is just another case of Roland Piquepaille... Check out the top level of his domain too, it's just an ad site...

      1. Create site about obvious hack with refferer commision links.
      2. Post your site on high volume site like /.
      3. Profit.

      4. Piss me off for wasting my time. I even wasted my time typing this up, I'm sure some "people have a right to profit" dude will mod me down.

  2. only 10c for a bracket. Oh and a fan. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Uhh that sounds like Microsoft costing.

    MS: "We can help you serve customers for only 10c a day!"
    Manager: "woohoo. Approved!"
    MS: "So your bill is $36.50 for the first year, plus $899 site license, plus $299 Windows licenses for each CPU plus $1599 service contract plus...."

    1. Re:only 10c for a bracket. Oh and a fan. by Deagol · · Score: 5, Interesting
      (I think that the article was worth while, and I'll personally take ths simple idea into account when trying to rig a new box on the cheap.)

      But back to the parent post...

      It *is* kinda funny, the 10-cent claim. I read a lot of those backwoods and country living kinds of managzines. They're usually full of great projects that the average person can usually pull off to some degree.

      What kills me is often the low-cost claims: "Build a central, forced-air wood heating system for only $10 !" Sounds really cool, until you read the article and find that the person already had a house's worth of air duct on-hand, an arc welder, and a friend who gave him enough plate steel for the furnace in exchange for a dozen eggs and a case of beer. :)

      These articles are still great, as they illustrate the make-due-with-what-you-have mentaility. However, a little truth in advertising would be appreciated. :)

  3. In other news... by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 5, Funny

    Your data called.
    It wants the integrity of its magnetic field back.

    1. Re:In other news... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 5, Informative

      The magnetic field produced by a small DC fan might not be enough to faze the platter. It takes a magnetic field of a certain strength to make a change in the data bits.

      I have a few Compaq Xeon workstations that placed the drives transversely in front of the system power supply so cooling air can pass between the drives. I have yet to see a problem. It's designed to cool 15k RPM drives very quietly. The PSU fan itself is a slower 12cm fan, placed on the intake of the PSU, only a few cm away from the drive's edges. It's very quiet for a PC, and very impressively quiet for a system with a 15k RPM drive in it.

    2. Re:In other news... by neverpsyked · · Score: 5, Informative

      A boss of mine who used to work for Air Force Intel told me that the magnetic field used to de-gauss an HDD had to be about as strong as a car-lifting magnet. I seriously doubt that the field generated by an 80mm fan is even enough to penetrate the steel housing of the drive (maybe not even the circuit board, since it's bottom-mounted).

      --
      What if this weren't a hypothetical question?
    3. Re:In other news... by tzanger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I've managed, unfortunately, to fry a pda that way. Pda was in my pants pocket. I was drilling holes in my wall. The EM field from the drill fried the motherboard. And they weren't that close together...

      Bullshit. I am an embedded systems designer and there's no way in hell your drill induced enough of an EM field to generate significant current in the traces of your PDA's mainboard. The stuff I design is strapped on to heatsink with thousands of Amps running through it without any kind of EMC protection and it runs flawlessly. Static discharge is more likely than not the cause of that particular failure.

  4. Yeah! by ArAgost · · Score: 5, Funny

    *This* is top-grade engineering! This could be used to cool down spacecraft re-entering earth atmosphere :|

  5. Classic case of a measurement mistaken for reality by arivanov · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well... Most S.M.A.R.T. temperature sensors are on the PCB and they are measuring PCB temperature instead of the internal drive temperature.

    Hence, a fan under the disk makes a lot of difference while making very little to make your data safer.

    A 3x 40mm fan battery in front of a drive or a pressed enclosure that cools the actual package holding the platters makes a lot of difference there while not chaning the S.M.A.R.T. reading by more then a degree or so.

    It is up to you - what do you want. Show (a good reading) or substance (good temperature of your drive platters and heads).

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  6. Vibration by darkwiz · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you decide to go with this kind of setup, try to make sure you use a fan with low vibration (well balanced, low speed). The last thing you need with a hard drive is more vibration. The drive head is only flying a few hundred molecules above the drive surface.

    It may not amount to much as the vibration needs to be of the right frequency to be really bad. But it is probably better to err on the side of caution with drive lifetimes already being as bad as they are.

    I personally use a 120mm fan that is mounted on rubber pegs, perpendicular to the hard drives, but not mounted to the drives themselves. This way, less vibration is transferred to the drives.

  7. call me silly.... by zakezuke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... but would it not make more sense to either

    1. mount a 90mm fan on the front of your 3.5 inch bays.
    2. mount a 120mm fan on the front of your 5.25 inch bays.

    This way you actually get airflow for 2 to 3 drives rather than blocking airflow with another damn drive.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  8. Re:HD Cooling? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some 7500RPM or higher drives that aren't well engineered can overheat in small spaces.

    I personally had a Western Digital 80gb harddrive overheat and cause errors in a normal midtower. (Several of my friends had the same problem with the same model)

    Since then my addage is if it's 7500rpm or higher put some fans on it. Since that realization I've had no problems.

  9. Re:Classic case of a measurement mistaken for real by RubberDogBone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah. LOL. It's not the PCB that gets hot anyway, at least not on my drives.

    The heat is in the disc, the drive motor, and related surfaces. Some of them can get quite hot. I still have some (working!) giant SCSI bricks that get hot enough to burn flesh.

    Full height 5.25 drives that would burn fingers and break your foot too, if you dropped it. I think it weighs close to 10 pounds. It'd probably still work after the fall but it only holds 1 gig or something. Not worth a bother.

    Anyway, I cool my drives with a 120v turbine fan that blows sideways across the whole drive. The air cools the disc side and the PCB side. Works great. Doesn't tax the system PSU.

    --
    Sig for hire.
  10. Woah! I was so close! by orionware · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was mounting the fan on the OUTSIDe of the case. I was alot cooler but that damn drives kept getting hot! I was so close...

    --


    Karma means nothing to me, so suck it...
  11. Come on SLASHDOT!!! GRRRRRRRRR by ServeYourWorld · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is obviously just a ploy to make some money. The guy has an affiliate link to PCMALL. He is hoping some people click and buy some other stuff along with the screw. Can we get back to real news?

  12. Re:Good for one drive but ... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's about as logical a complaint about this article as "sure, I can play music on an iPod, but what happens if I'm deaf?"

    Answer: you can't use this hack in your case.

  13. Be Careful by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Funny
    I also tried mounting a fan to my hard drive with an angle bracket. I found out that you need to be really careful about how deep you drill and tap the mounting holes into the drive.

    I used 1/2-inch deep holes, and the drive wouldn't even fire up when I tried to boot. It turned out that the drive had really flimsy construction, and they had moving parts right under the surface that were immobilized by the screws. The cheap POS wouldn't even work after I took the screws back out.

    If you plan to do this, I'd recommend using very short screws; probably no more than 1/8-inch.

  14. Request for fan filter material info by btarval · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Thanks for posting that; I found it interesting.

    This brings up a related subject, namely, putting a filter in front of the fan to filter out dust. Antec rackmount cases have a great solution, namely a removeable tray in front of the fan. The tray comes with a spongy filter type of material which is anti-static.

    I've tried finding a raw source for this material, with no luck. Does anyone know where one might find this?

    Basically I'd like to get a large sheet of this, and cut it up appropriately for all of the various fans that I have. I'd really like to reduce the dust in my systems.

    If anyone knows of a source for the raw anti-static material in large quantities, I'd appreciate knowing it. Thanks in advance.

    --
    The best way to predict the future is to create it. - Peter Drucker.