| MDD
Dual 1.25GHz Cooling Modification
**DISCLAIMER**
Altering any part of your OS or computer will void your warranty
and may damage your computer. These modifications are for educational
purposes only and are performed at the owners risk - This site
or it's owner are not responsible for any damage caused.
Previous
visitors to this site will recall a fan mod I performed that allowed
me to manually control the internal fan using a potentiometer
mounted near the power button. I was not happy with this solution
and started working on phase two of this project. Well, the results
are beyond my expectations and have some pictures of the mod performed.
The
system (originally a 2003 Dual 1.25MHz MDD FW400) is fitted with
an original Apple 1.42GHz module that has been overclocked to
1.5GHz. This module runs a little hotter than the 1.25GHz module
not just because of it's higher clock speed but also due to the
higher voltage that is fed to the CPU's (1.60V as opposed to 1.55V).
A
copper heatsink from a dual 1.42GHz MDD was purchased and replaced
the aluminium heatsink that came standard. Initially, I installed
a Verax M10 heatsink cooling kit and although this made an improvement,
it was not good enough. Verax fans however are a different story.
They are the quietest fans around and was able to add 4 new fans
to MDD chassis without any increase in noise. I also exchanged
the power supply fans (twin 60mm Deltas) with the Verax M11 kit.
This made the most difference to the overall noise the MDD produced.
Using
the G5 fan design as inspiration, two 65mm Verax fans were mounted
on the front grill, under the plastic fascia. These draw air into
the chassis past the SCSI drive bays and into the main system
fan (original Papst exchanged for a Panaflo). The Panaflo pushes
air past the heatsink onto 65mm and 80mm verax fans mounted behind
the copper heatsink. These two fans draw hot air straight out
the back.
The
two 65mm fans on the front grill share power with one of the ATA100
IDE drives. The rear fans source their power from an unused 12VDC
connector on the motherboard (near the Airport slot).
A
12VDC PCI fan has also been installed, however at full speed it
is noisy. To get around this it shares power with the optical
drive fan mounted on the side door and averages approx 6VDC, only
increasing when the temperature gets too hot (which is rare now).
Temperature
Monitor now reports the system temp as approx 54°C down
from a much hotter 59°C. Please also see the Applefan.kext
mod that was performed.
A
replacement MDD door bezel was also purchased ($9US from eBay
=) to replace the one I drilled a hole in from phase one of this
project. The next step for me is to find a low profile GeForce
4Ti fan that is quiet (this is the loudest component of the system
now)
A
lot of people have contacted me requesting info on the fans I
used. Below are the specs for the stock MDD fans:
* Papst 4212H 120x120x38mm - 3400rpm / 108CFM @ 49dB
* Acbel power supply fans (x2) Minebea 2410ML-04W-B60 60x60x25mm
- 5300rpm / 25CFM @ 38dB
I have read that Apple has also used Delta AFB0612EH - 6800rpm
/ 38 CFM @ 47 dBA. I think these were used in the very first MDD's
that everyone complained about and Apple subsequently started
the power supply exchange program that offered both AcBel (newer
version - possibly like the one in my 2003 MDD) and Samsung power
supplies.
* Optical drive fan is a Delta AFB0612HHB 60x60x15 - 4500rpm /
17.3CFM @ 35dB
_________________________________
and the new fans used:
* 120mm Panaflo FBA12G12H - 2500rpm / 103.8CFM @ 41dB (bear in
mind this fan never runs at full speed - usually about 7V or half
speed so I would figure about 25-30dB of noise at normal operating
temperature)
* PSU fans (Power Supply) - Verax M11 PSU Kit. These contain Verax
65201237-KT 65x65x20 - 3700rpm (variable) fans - I don't know
the CFM or dB rating however they move a decent amount of air
and are virtually silent due to a three phase motor design. You
literally need to concentrate and get right near them to hear
them in action. I also used these fans on the front and rear grilles
along with Verax 80251231-KT2 80x80x25 3100rpm on the rear.
* I have not yet found a suitable replacement for the Optical
drive fan hence the stock fan remains.
Having said all this, the quickest and easiest way to make your
MDD quieter is to change the PSU fans - they are the major culprit.
The best way to get a cooler running MDD without changing any
fans is to replace the aluminium heatsink with a copper heatpipe
heatsink from a dual 1.42GHz MDD (Apple P/N 076-0983). |