Cooling experts, please halp ! Fan optimization for Deepcool Tesseract SW.

faresbarguti

Prominent
Nov 14, 2017
3
0
510
Hello everyone, I just got my first budget gaming pc and wanted to keep it as clean and cool as possible.

http://www.deepcool.com/product/case/2014-05/9_840.shtml

As the title points out, I have that case which came in with 2 fans ( 1 front intake, 1 rear exhaust ) both are LED and I'm questioning their performance. I have 2 fan slots on the side panel without mesh filter and 2 on top with filter. I'm planning on getting AT LEAST 1 more DECENT fan, but I don't know how to optimize the air flow, so I need your help.

My computer specs are :
8GB (2x4) Crucial Ballistix
CPU - Ryzen 5 1600 with the stock (Wraith Spire cooler)
GPU - GTX1060 3GB Palit Dual
PSU - EVGA 500W
HDD Toshiba 1TB.

Now I haven't monitored the temperatures very closely but I had to set my own fan curve on the GPU because the temps were reaching 80 even 90 degrees (celsius) with the default curve while gaming.
Right now it idles at 35-37 , and goes to 61-65 C degrees with fans running at 65 -70 % (it gets a bit noisy but oh well.)

Will there be improvement with additional fans ? if so which brands would you recommend and how should I set them up ?

Sorry, I know this topic has been posted before but the answers weren't very specific.
Thank you in advance.





 
Solution
If anything it's ideal to have your intakes and your exhausts be equal to each other in both the amount of air they move and the rpm at which they move them. Since your case only has 4 fan mounting locations with the front being a single 120mm intake and the rest being possible exhausts, the standard setup is fine, with the front as intake and the rear fan as exhaust. If you want to do anything to the fans, then you should swap them out for better fans, perhaps higher static pressured fans and with higher RPM's.

The fans I'm speaking of aren't cheap. Noctua, Corsair, Bitfenix and Thermaltake makes some good static pressure fans.

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
If anything it's ideal to have your intakes and your exhausts be equal to each other in both the amount of air they move and the rpm at which they move them. Since your case only has 4 fan mounting locations with the front being a single 120mm intake and the rest being possible exhausts, the standard setup is fine, with the front as intake and the rear fan as exhaust. If you want to do anything to the fans, then you should swap them out for better fans, perhaps higher static pressured fans and with higher RPM's.

The fans I'm speaking of aren't cheap. Noctua, Corsair, Bitfenix and Thermaltake makes some good static pressure fans.
 
Solution

faresbarguti

Prominent
Nov 14, 2017
3
0
510


Thank you, I overlooked the fact that their should be some kind of balance a little. I was wondering though, aren't high static pressure fans used for heatsinks and such ? Wouldn't high air flow fans be better for the case (1front, 1 rear) ?