Associate
- Joined
- 16 May 2013
- Posts
- 7
Hi!
An 18 year old me built his dream PC back in 2014/15 with an i5 4690 and H80i AIO, R9 380 and a relatively large Bitfenix Shinobi case, among the usual other bits and bobs like SSD and PSU. It was my pride and joy, loved making changes and modding the case, adding lights and all that to make it different!
Fast forward 10 years and having gone through 1st line support apprenticeship, 2nd line and into project work, getting more into cars and buying houses, I have very little interest or time in building PCs and what they look like as long as it does the job well and doesn't look like junk.
Now with Windows 10 going EOL and being unable to upgrade to 11 and with performance creaking at the seams, it's time to upgrade. I've managed to acquire a HP Z2 G4 PC that has an i7 9700, 500gb m2 SSD and a 500w PSU with a 6 & 6+2 PCIe connectors, in a far smaller and more discreet case which is also important to me these days. The plan is to fit an RTX 5060 and be done with it, however the stock CPU cooler won't cut it, the temps are high at idle let alone under load.
So the reason for this post.. I don't have the budget for a new CPU cooler and I still like messing and modifying, I'm not really one to keep things as they come if I can make something better. So I want to keep my H80i in use which will mean drilling holes somewhere as there's no mounting for it.
The plan is to have the fan-radiator-fan package exhausting at the top front just in front of the PSU (which is top back mounted instead of bottom) kind of inside the 5.25" bays as i have no need for an optical drive, with holes drilled in the top of the case for the ventilation, and a 100mm (120mm if it'll fit) at the front for intake to feed cold air while keeping the 100mm fan at the back exhausting as well.
I remember something about positive and negative pressure and air flow in a case from back in the day, would this be an acceptable setup or will i have temperature, pressure, dust or some other problems? I don't mind chopping parts out that I don't need if it makes it better, but I do need somewhere to put a 3.5" drive.
Thanks!
Hopefully if I've done it right, there should be a picture of the inside of the case somewhere in this post
An 18 year old me built his dream PC back in 2014/15 with an i5 4690 and H80i AIO, R9 380 and a relatively large Bitfenix Shinobi case, among the usual other bits and bobs like SSD and PSU. It was my pride and joy, loved making changes and modding the case, adding lights and all that to make it different!
Fast forward 10 years and having gone through 1st line support apprenticeship, 2nd line and into project work, getting more into cars and buying houses, I have very little interest or time in building PCs and what they look like as long as it does the job well and doesn't look like junk.
Now with Windows 10 going EOL and being unable to upgrade to 11 and with performance creaking at the seams, it's time to upgrade. I've managed to acquire a HP Z2 G4 PC that has an i7 9700, 500gb m2 SSD and a 500w PSU with a 6 & 6+2 PCIe connectors, in a far smaller and more discreet case which is also important to me these days. The plan is to fit an RTX 5060 and be done with it, however the stock CPU cooler won't cut it, the temps are high at idle let alone under load.
So the reason for this post.. I don't have the budget for a new CPU cooler and I still like messing and modifying, I'm not really one to keep things as they come if I can make something better. So I want to keep my H80i in use which will mean drilling holes somewhere as there's no mounting for it.
The plan is to have the fan-radiator-fan package exhausting at the top front just in front of the PSU (which is top back mounted instead of bottom) kind of inside the 5.25" bays as i have no need for an optical drive, with holes drilled in the top of the case for the ventilation, and a 100mm (120mm if it'll fit) at the front for intake to feed cold air while keeping the 100mm fan at the back exhausting as well.
I remember something about positive and negative pressure and air flow in a case from back in the day, would this be an acceptable setup or will i have temperature, pressure, dust or some other problems? I don't mind chopping parts out that I don't need if it makes it better, but I do need somewhere to put a 3.5" drive.
Thanks!
Hopefully if I've done it right, there should be a picture of the inside of the case somewhere in this post
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It's also incredibly quiet!
If you can't even fit a mini, it's so cramped and poor cooling anyway