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PSU running a bit warm...?

agi_shi
06-22-2007, 12:55 PM
Ok, so I have 2 PSUs in my house:

480W TruePowerII Antec - main rig: 1gig of ram, x2 3800+, x850xt, 1 HD

400W Fortron (FSP Group) - emachines rig: 512megs of ram, 6100 IGP, 1 HD, 3000+ sempron

When I feel the air coming out of the fortron, it's cool. Literally. When I feel the air coming out of my antec, it's warm. Not "hot", but warm. Now that I feel it again, it's not "hot" at all, but it IS indeed warm.

Am I to be worried? Or is this normal? I'm just worried because my fortron is all nice and cool, and this baby that's powering my rig is warm...

Also: do you think it's safe to keep running with this one if I were to get a 8800GTS (320MB)? It says it needs a minimum of 400W, which my unit has, and 26A on the +12V rail, which I have as well... my systems isn't really all that loaded:
AMD A64 X2 3800+
1GB Corsair DDR2
1 HD
2 DVD-RW
4 case fans and 2 LEDs
... pretty much it.

Thoughts?

supersmashbrada
06-22-2007, 01:00 PM
you shouldnt be worried about the warm air coming out of your psu, it has to go somewhere right? Dont worry. Oh and with those rails you should be able to run the gts card fine.

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06-22-2007, 01:00 PM

agi_shi
06-22-2007, 01:21 PM
you shouldnt be worried about the warm air coming out of your psu, it has to go somewhere right? Dont worry. Oh and with those rails you should be able to run the gts card fine.
Thanks!

I thought it was probably nothing to worry about, it's just that the other one was blowing out cool air so I got a bit worried :D :blush: .

Peace!

beef_jerky4104
06-23-2007, 08:13 PM
The PSU's job (besides powering the system) is to help remove hot air from the PC.

MetalX
06-23-2007, 08:51 PM
Yup. The air coming out is supposed to be warm. That's why there's a fan there :)

agi_shi
06-24-2007, 05:28 PM
Yup. The air coming out is supposed to be warm. That's why there's a fan there :)
Then is it possible my Fortron has gone bonkers?! It only blows out cool air (yet the system is as stable as a rock).

:confused: :eek: :suspiciou :knock:

almcneil
06-24-2007, 05:57 PM
If you're at all concerned, load Lavalys EVEREST Home Edition and monitor the temperature sensors. Most mobo's and CPUs should be operating in the 30 to 40 deg-C range. If the temp is above 50 deg-C, then you're in danger of frying your mobo!

You can get EVEREST at http://www.freedownloadscenter.com/Utilities/System_Analysis_Utilities/Lavalys_EVEREST_Home_Edition.html

thebaronjocelin
06-24-2007, 10:42 PM
Infact, if you have an nForce4 motherboard, one of the more helpful utilities I've seen is the nTune module. It's official and legit. Gives a handy, easy temp monitor, and if you get concerned, you can use the autotune function to tone everything down a bit.

agi_shi
06-26-2007, 07:52 PM
Oh, don't worry - I know how to handle my temps ;) (I OCed my X2 3800+ to a 5400+ basically and stayed within reasonable temps). And I have a NF590SLI mobo, and I must say, the nVidia nMonitor app comes in very useful to temperature monitoring.

I was just asking why one PSU would blow out cool air when another would blow out warm air :)

almcneil
06-27-2007, 11:28 AM
Probably like some people, the PSU just don't know what's it talking about!

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06-27-2007, 11:28 AM

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