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Making Your PC Dust Free?

Kranfer asks: "Recently, I cleaned out my PC to find not only dust... but also feathers from my from rather large parrots. I have struggled with keeping my PC dust free for years, but I have yet to find a workable solution that will keep the dust from stacking up every few months, inside my PCs at home. I was hoping that my peers on Slashdot might have thought up some innovative solutions to this common problem with any PC. How does one cut down on the dust entering a PC and sticking around? I run an Antec File Server Case with each and every fan slot taken blowing out, and even one of those Harddrive coolers and PCI slot coolers. What have you done to rid yourself of the dust and pet dander inside your PCs?"

9 of 89 comments (clear)

  1. Easy! by paulius_g · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Put fan filters on all of your fans! They cost around $1 and do a good job.

  2. tips following clean room standards (?) by real_smiff · · Score: 5, Informative

    you need to keep a positive pressure inside the PC (so blow the fans IN, more than out), and then you can filter the air on the intake and not have dust getting in anywhere else... as for what filter material you use, i don't know, hopefully others can suggest something cheap and easily available in large rolls (i'm thinking of aquarium filter, probably not fine enough though for air). you want some fine mat material that you can replace or blow out every few weeks.
    i've been meaning to solve this problem myself because it cant be good for component life either.
    you have parrots in the same room as the PC?! :)

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  3. Air conditioner filters by TheCamper · · Score: 5, Informative

    My current frankenstein-box, before I gave in and bought a non-stock cpu cooler, was cooled by a 20" galaxy fan (about $11 from WalMart) bolted onto the side of the case in place of an actual case cover. After a few months, the entire case was a christmas wonderland of gray gunk. I had to take the whole thing apart and peel off sheets of lint that reminded me of cleaning out the lint trap on a dryer. So I bought an air conditioner filter, and duct taped it onto the galaxy fan. Changed it every few months, and not one bit of dust.

    Of course, this still works with normal 80mm fans. Go to Walmart and buy an aircondioner filter, and cut out 80mm diameter circles. Just screw through them with the same screws that hold your fans onto your case. Change whenever they look really bad, or when you notice your temps going up.

  4. Stockings by repvik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes. Stockings. From the significant other that you wish you had. They make excellent, cheap dust filters.

  5. all blowing out? by maroonhat · · Score: 4, Informative

    every fan slot taken blowing out


    BAD IDEA
    Then all the air coming into your case will be sucked from the edges and between hte drive bays, places where dust is likley to collect anyway.
    Its better to run them at a 50/50 (40/60 can work too) mix of in/out fans, and the sugestion about the filters is on the mark as well.

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  6. 'Blowing out' not good by AdiBean · · Score: 4, Informative

    You said each and every fan slot was blowing out. That is your problem. The air that is going in to the box is coming from whatever cracks, vents, etc there are. Most, if not all, of these will be unfiltered so you are sucking up environmental dust.

    In order to keep dust out of your PC, you need to control the air going *in* to the box. That means having more fans blowing in than out so that the case has a net positive air pressure. This way, air is blowing out of the miscellaneous cracks in the case. Once you do this, you add filters to the fans that are blowing in. No more dust in box.

    The most important thing to remember if you use filters on your fans is to clean them often. Clogged intake fans will heat your case up like crazy.

    I would also note that you need a balance of fans blowing in and out so that you get the best airflow through the case. Don't have them all going the same direction as that will rarely provide the best cooling.

  7. Get your case off the floor. by redheaded_stepchild · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can really reduce the amount of dust in a case just by getting it up off the floor. Higher is better. Dust tends to settle near the floor, and especially if you have carpet, walking by the desk will kick up small amounts of dust every time.

    60/40 on the in/out for fans (don't waste money & time with slot fans) and you can get cheap filter material from a motherboard box. You know, the spongy stuff inside the box? Cut it into 80mm squares. Works like a champ. Mount between fan & case.

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  8. Easy by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 4, Funny

    Train the parrots to clean the PC.

  9. Case mod time... by GrpA · · Score: 4, Funny

    Heh, this question is not as difficult as it seems. All off the shelf stuff.

    Sure, you need positive pressure in the case, but think Auto Shop!

    They sell high volume paper/oil air filters. The oil traps the airborne dust particles quite effectively, and they are easy to replace.

    So, just find an old turbo, install a brushless motor from a RC plane and controller with a servo activator PCB (many hobby places sell these) so you can adjust the speed - or even control it straight from the PC.

    Use this as the impellor, with the Turbo attached to the case (mock up the back end, or even use it as the exhaust) and just attach an Auto Pod Filter...

    Don't forget to add "Phulli Sik" stickers to the side of the case, and maybe a few logo's on the front.... AMD, Nvidia, etc. Attached to the drive bay door at a slight angle. (With an Intel sticker cut in half, upside down, on the spoiler .... You gotta have a spoiler).

    Bonus points if the Turbo spools when you use a pedal accelerator on driving games.

    Oh, and wear your cap on backwards at Lan parties.

    Well, it might sound funny, but this would actually work. Of course, you can buy car air filters as flat panels also, and the oil comes in a spray can, but that's just cheating now!.

    GrpA

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