As a pc builder, i recommend looking on the fan for the air flow arrow that is printed on almost every fan ive seen. It points which way the air is going to flow so you dont gotta second guess
I was told you can immidiately tell which side the airflow is flowing based on the side of the fan which has a rotating center that rotates with the fans (esentially the obvious front side of fan). This side is the side which pulls air in.
it's great when those arrows are raised but i had these new noctua fans that had them recessed and i could barely see them so i filled them out with a little sharpie
Generally, you want the case fans in front of the case drawing in air while the fans at the rear blow air out. If your case has vents at the top, they should be placed as exhaust fans because hot air will rise. Side-mounted fans should be used for intake, though they often don't have air filters. What you are looking to do is INTAKE on front and bottom and EXHAUST on top and back. Altogether I have 9 fans, 3 at the front 2 at the bottom for INTAKE and a 360 AIO and back fan for EXHAUST.
@@nostrum6410 Well it depends obviously on your set up. Mine works perfectly using NZXT H6 Flow chassis. But then you should still balance the INTAKE and EXHAUST. No use having 3 front intake and only one exhaust fan, i mean you could but would not be ideal. Again another factor is the chassis.
Back when tempered glass side panels weren't a big thing, some people used to put fans on the side panel. Became so popular that case manufacturers made dedicated grills and mounts on their main side panel. The idea was for the side panel fan to get cool air immediately to the gpu, while the front fans got air to the air cooler on your cpu. While it doesn't work too well in practice, a custom cooling company recently made some 3D printable guides that separated the airflow in their case so you could actually do this. They designed their case and the guides so it would take air from the side to cool the lower half of the case, while protecting the gpu from the bottom mounted psu, and a guide for the top part so it focused air from the front intake directly into the area around both the top and where an air cooler would sit. The results were quite impressive. I couldn't care less about aesthetics, so if this became more mainstream, I'd be a happy pc guy.
Yeah. He should test the system without the rear one and look if there is any significant benefit for it. Air might go trough the holes decently enough.
My prebuild came with only one exhaust fan so I bought 3 cooler master fans with rgb for the front. These fans were so beautiful that I bought another one for exhaust instead of the default one. And I bought their master liquid. It wasn’t necessary but the aesthetics were amazing.
and this is the reason why you should addict your childeren to PC gaming asap. Then they never have enough money for drugs. They just keep spending on their pc to make it better or more pleasing to look at.
Really appreciate the video. I have been working on designing my own pc case, and air flow has been one of the things I’ve been thinking about in the design.
I certainly prefer positive pressure to avoid dust buildup and for me it works brilliantly, everyone's style and preferences are different though so it's up to you, just make sure you've got fans with inflow and outflow and maybe use a stick of incense to see the airflow and directions to ensure it's a smooth direction of airflow instead of choppy in order to maximise your cooking effect.
If you have good intake and there are enough exhaust holes and your system isint superhot then you might not even need separate exhaust. 2x160 mm frontal intake on 7000 series amd system should work great.
2 intakes on AMD 7000 definitely not enough at least not when paired with a good gpu. But yeah I've ordered a few extra fans and will be doing 3 front in 3 top in and 1 rear out. Top had a filter so I'm hoping that stops most of the dust.
to add why the top fans should be an exhaust and not an intake, hot air goes up so it will help the airflow going with the flow of the air instead of against it.
dont really think natural convection matters with fans in the mix. also, i got intake on the top cuz... idk actually, because I needed more exhaust I guess but then I could just swap them around I dunno
the moment you use front intake fans, thermal dynamic of hot air rising naturaly goes out the window since the front fans blow air to the back of the case. sure it helps i agree, but its not a deciding factor anymore. That would only be case in pasive cooling, not active cooling
i bought a fridge years ago. cut into the door of the fridge holes for 6 fans down one side and 6 down the right hand side of the door, left in, right out. got my mate to cnc machine some tools to create carbon fibre cowlings for the air flow onto the components and then from them to go back out, using the filters from dyson hoovers to keep dust to a minimum. run the fridge at max cooling, sealed the fans in with silicone sealant. when I buy new components, I open the fridge door as normal, take out the test rig platform it all sits on, and replace as needed, push it all back in, job done. I would say it extends the life of the components massively, ive often kept stuff running overclocked, for years.
O thank you for answering my question it was for me sister she has a fishtank style case i don't use them but will change it to have more intake over exhaust right now it has more exhaust over intake
My fractal torrent compact has 2 180mm fans in the front and that's enough, my PC doesn't overheat at all, it's crazy how good the airflow in the case is, and it's also a beautiful case imo, I highly recommend it
Bought a pre built with only 3 fans. All of them being intake fans. Had overheating issues. Bought 3 more fans and reorganized them similarly in this video and it made a massive difference.
Make sure your fans actually move air, i bought some unknown to me brand on amazon, and hooking them directly to molex via an adapter, and i couldn't feel air moving more than an inch away on either side. and yes, it was my fault for thinking that there was no way to mess up a fan.
My PC has the universal 3 fans at the front door intake, 1 at the back exhaust, and 2 additional fans up top for more exhaust. The Corsair 4000D chassis is spacious enough.
I have two big ones at the top and the ones from my two GPUs (back), blowing hot air out of the PC. (no intake fan) Fresh air is coming in from the front, the side and in rare extreme situations, the bottom of the back, through the PSU. I am using a negative pressure air cooled system. The openings for air intake are much wider, so the air is moving slow, preventing dirt from being sucked into the PC. The air accelerates inside the PC, taking a lot of heat with it, cooling all parts that actually heat. My CPU max temp is 47 °C My GPU max temp is 75 °C (intentionally, but could be lowered to 59 °C)
A good rule of thumb is that, hot air rises a lot faster than cold air. Always have exhaust fans near the top of the case, while intake should be around the bottom. But just as he stated, there are a lot of exceptions
I have 3 on the front and 3 on the side as intake (all filtered) 3 on the top over an AIO as exhaust, and one on the top rear as exhaust. PSU sucks from bottom and exhaust through it's rear. Planning to make a shroud and make the rear fan an intake for the VRMs.
I find this advise productive, as with positive pressure (more in than out), suggests that, once powered off, air will, by default, be moving out of the computer, to neutralize pressure.
I prefer a positive pressure build, in at the front or bottom and exhaust up top, this is because heat wants to rise and to force the dust out with that pressure.
I meannn, I don't really recommend this if your clumsy, have kids or if your desk area is cluttered and unorganized, but I put my fans in but I also took the side glass off. My area is fairly organized, I don't have kids (that I know of at least) I no longer have any pets and my house isn't really dusty. The PC is under my desk. I really only use a water bottle to drink out of. Soo, I felt comfortable just leaving it off for more air and "breathing room." 2 years later, I have had absolutely zero issues and my temperatures are a few degrees cooler than when I would have it on.
I have a little wonky airflow setup but I did it cause of case restrictions ATX case 240mm aio, front, exhaust, can hold up to 360mm aio (wouldn't fit on top due to ram restrictions) Top 2 fans, intake Back 1 fan, intake
With 30 and 40 series gpu it is best to put the radiator as an intake. Because if it was exhaust orientation it will only get the hot air that is coming out of the gpu
Probably should also remind that you want both regular and reverse bladed fans Regular fans can be your intake fans while the reverse blade fans can be your exhaust
I got 7 fans in my case just because i had spares and it fills everything out. 3x intake on the front and 4x exhaust (3 top, 1 rear). This results in negative pressure, but you can modulate the rpms so that the intakes outweigh the exhausts overall to create positive pressure. FanControl is free and lets you micro this stuff or you can change it in your bios.
I have my front and top fans as intake and the rear as an outtake for positive pressure since I have radiators on the front and top for my water cooling loop.
My rule of thumb is to match all the fans and always have at least 1 more intake than exhaust. Otherwise you gotta go by cfm and many won't understand how to do that.
Hey Zach will you do a video on a super underrated cooling brand called Arctic please? Their products look incredibly sleek and outperform much more expensive stuff by a mile
I have 3 front and 2 bottom 120mm fans set as intake and 3 120mm top rad fans and a 140mm rear for exhaust. Should provide plenty of fresh cold air and keep all air moving to prevent hotspots. My mobo is equiped with 2 movable thermal probes and a mic that detects fan noise in addition to the usual chip thermal monitoring and it stays near ambient temps under load on silent mode.
If you have an AIO, keep the bubbles in mind while mounting the radiator. Having g the connector at the top or pump are the 2 worst setups. This was shown in almost every pic.
1. There are arrows on the side of your fans indicating airflow and spin direction 2. Hot air rises, that's why you want the top fans to be exhaust. 3. Exhaust is more important than intake: if you only have one fan, have it be exhaust 4. More intake means less dust, more exhaust means better cooling
Actually there are circumstances when you might want your top fans to be intake rather than exhaust. For instance. You only have 2 120mm fans on the front for intake. But 1 120 on the back for exhaust, then you buy a 240 AIO and top mount it. So now youre adding 2 240 fans to the top. If you put them as exhause youll end up with negative pressure airflow.
Intake must be more than exhaust sop that the colder air can reach to more obsecure areas where the hot components subside, also hot air is less dense than cold air so they float like helium although less than helium so generally you want to have exhaust at the back or top to suck the hot air and intake at the front or bottom to have efficient cooling and to prevent the fans to suck the hot air back in again.
I find my cpu keeps better temps with 3 intake in front, 1 intake up top on the front half, 1 exhaust on the upper back half and 1 exit at the rear. That being said I have a Corsair airflow case which is pretty good at keeping out dust and I clean my pc every couple weeks.
So in 2022 I bought my first desktop pc, and at the time I didn’t know anything about pc, so I just didn’t know how big of a scam it was. The pc had: I5-10400F Asus prime H410 M-E Corsair CV 550W 80+ bronze Kingston Fury 16GB (2x8GB) 2666MHz Kingston 500GB M.2 NVMe GeForce GTX 1650 4GB Paid almost 300 for THE 1650 ALONE( I googled and it didn’t cost that much even at launch). For the whole pc paid around 800€(keep in mind I bought it in Europe bc I live here). I’m still mad at them.
I went overboard with fans I have 9, 6 intake and 3 exhaust. Stays super cools and surprisingly super quite tho the fans only trun around 500-600rpm while gaming
As a pc builder, i recommend looking on the fan for the air flow arrow that is printed on almost every fan ive seen. It points which way the air is going to flow so you dont gotta second guess
I was told you can immidiately tell which side the airflow is flowing based on the side of the fan which has a rotating center that rotates with the fans (esentially the obvious front side of fan). This side is the side which pulls air in.
Is it fine to mix fans from different brands?
@@redvic83 yeah but the more powerful fans need to be set to intake
also pretty easy to tell if you turn it on
it's great when those arrows are raised but i had these new noctua fans that had them recessed and i could barely see them so i filled them out with a little sharpie
I recommend looking at the fan blade and how it cups one way or the other. It will scoop air in only one direction.
Sometimes theres an arrow on the side telling you what way air goes
Easiest way to tell is, the side that has the supports is the side that air is pushed out.
All I know is 'Faces Suck'
The side that curves point to is the exhaust
Just imagine the blades as scoops.
at one point i had all intake for my fans, even the radiator, and my gpu and motherboard set fire💀
Damn bro I hope that you saved everything else 💀
Rip bro's PC ⚰️🙏🌹
RIP PC.
this setup isn't dangerous lol it's obviously better to have an exhaust fan but you only really need one or two
😂😂
Generally, you want the case fans in front of the case drawing in air while the fans at the rear blow air out. If your case has vents at the top, they should be placed as exhaust fans because hot air will rise. Side-mounted fans should be used for intake, though they often don't have air filters. What you are looking to do is INTAKE on front and bottom and EXHAUST on top and back. Altogether I have 9 fans, 3 at the front 2 at the bottom for INTAKE and a 360 AIO and back fan for EXHAUST.
that sounds like extreme overkill to me
@@nostrum6410 Well if you really want cool temps then, and no it's not.
@@MrMin316 bet you could take out half the fans with little difference
@@nostrum6410 Well it depends obviously on your set up. Mine works perfectly using NZXT H6 Flow chassis. But then you should still balance the INTAKE and EXHAUST. No use having 3 front intake and only one exhaust fan, i mean you could but would not be ideal. Again another factor is the chassis.
What about asus ap201??, the only intake fan available is from above
If you configure your fans good enough Maybe carter will do the thug shake
Jesus christ
@@evanwilson9529 Should do the thug shake with Carter
Any no what people are trying to have cater do the thug shake in a zachspc comment section
@@evanwilson9529what about him
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAÆEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Damn I’ve been spinning mine with my hand all this time
@greygreygreypoodamn right
i've been doing this since i got my pc. a bit annoying since i have 2 hands and 4 fans, but a crank for all of them really helps!
Back when tempered glass side panels weren't a big thing, some people used to put fans on the side panel. Became so popular that case manufacturers made dedicated grills and mounts on their main side panel. The idea was for the side panel fan to get cool air immediately to the gpu, while the front fans got air to the air cooler on your cpu. While it doesn't work too well in practice, a custom cooling company recently made some 3D printable guides that separated the airflow in their case so you could actually do this. They designed their case and the guides so it would take air from the side to cool the lower half of the case, while protecting the gpu from the bottom mounted psu, and a guide for the top part so it focused air from the front intake directly into the area around both the top and where an air cooler would sit. The results were quite impressive. I couldn't care less about aesthetics, so if this became more mainstream, I'd be a happy pc guy.
3 in the front. 1 in the back
Eyy yoo 😂
I knew someone would say this 😂
Yeah. He should test the system without the rear one and look if there is any significant benefit for it. Air might go trough the holes decently enough.
This is a detailed worthy guide topic for a full length video. Please do it
My prebuild came with only one exhaust fan so I bought 3 cooler master fans with rgb for the front. These fans were so beautiful that I bought another one for exhaust instead of the default one. And I bought their master liquid. It wasn’t necessary but the aesthetics were amazing.
and this is the reason why you should addict your childeren to PC gaming asap. Then they never have enough money for drugs. They just keep spending on their pc to make it better or more pleasing to look at.
@@ronniebots9225 1000 iq
I'm buying new fans soon and I was asking myself exactly this lol
Really appreciate the video. I have been working on designing my own pc case, and air flow has been one of the things I’ve been thinking about in the design.
I certainly prefer positive pressure to avoid dust buildup and for me it works brilliantly, everyone's style and preferences are different though so it's up to you, just make sure you've got fans with inflow and outflow and maybe use a stick of incense to see the airflow and directions to ensure it's a smooth direction of airflow instead of choppy in order to maximise your cooking effect.
I have always been running two 140 and one 120 in and three 120 out. slight over pressure and it works really well.
I noticed that in my case having all of my fans as intake and only one as exhaust brings my temperatures down by a lot
If you have good intake and there are enough exhaust holes and your system isint superhot then you might not even need separate exhaust. 2x160 mm frontal intake on 7000 series amd system should work great.
2 intakes on AMD 7000 definitely not enough at least not when paired with a good gpu. But yeah I've ordered a few extra fans and will be doing 3 front in 3 top in and 1 rear out. Top had a filter so I'm hoping that stops most of the dust.
Also hot air moves up, so encouraging hot air to go up faster than it usually moves, it improves airflow.
I have my grandmas asahi fan and still kickin dust + good aiflow
Which way should my vertical cpu cooler face?
I used to go the shocker route 2 in the front, 1 in the back, now I'm doin the foreigner
to add why the top fans should be an exhaust and not an intake, hot air goes up so it will help the airflow going with the flow of the air instead of against it.
dont really think natural convection matters with fans in the mix. also, i got intake on the top cuz... idk actually, because I needed more exhaust I guess but then I could just swap them around I dunno
If the top fan are intakes,the will suck and blow the dust directly to the motherboard's components and GPU,which is not good.
Depends on case
In fish tanks it will change
@@arghyaprotimhalder5592 also with some mesh cases, going all intake except for back exhaust can actually bring temps down a good bit
the moment you use front intake fans, thermal dynamic of hot air rising naturaly goes out the window since the front fans blow air to the back of the case.
sure it helps i agree, but its not a deciding factor anymore. That would only be case in pasive cooling, not active cooling
They should add like a carving of the fans that say in or out
3 front, 1 rear and 1 top/rear.
Best basic config tested
Thanks!! I am building my first pc soon and this is one of the things I wasn’t sure about
Explained very well and accurately.
What i did is also take into account that some psu can be used as an exhaust fan if it didnt use fresh air intake.
i bought a fridge years ago.
cut into the door of the fridge holes for 6 fans down one side and 6 down the right hand side of the door, left in, right out.
got my mate to cnc machine some tools to create carbon fibre cowlings for the air flow onto the components and then from them to go back out, using the filters from dyson hoovers to keep dust to a minimum.
run the fridge at max cooling, sealed the fans in with silicone sealant.
when I buy new components, I open the fridge door as normal, take out the test rig platform it all sits on, and replace as needed, push it all back in, job done.
I would say it extends the life of the components massively, ive often kept stuff running overclocked, for years.
O thank you for answering my question it was for me sister she has a fishtank style case i don't use them but will change it to have more intake over exhaust right now it has more exhaust over intake
Did David Icke dirty 😂
My fractal torrent compact has 2 180mm fans in the front and that's enough, my PC doesn't overheat at all, it's crazy how good the airflow in the case is, and it's also a beautiful case imo, I highly recommend it
Finally I was looking for this video
Putting exhaust at top is not because of dust but because of convection where hot air goes up and cold air goes down
that would make very little difference
Bought a pre built with only 3 fans. All of them being intake fans. Had overheating issues. Bought 3 more fans and reorganized them similarly in this video and it made a massive difference.
Keep up the good work man
Make sure your fans actually move air, i bought some unknown to me brand on amazon, and hooking them directly to molex via an adapter, and i couldn't feel air moving more than an inch away on either side. and yes, it was my fault for thinking that there was no way to mess up a fan.
I use more of mine for intake so my case has positive pressure to help keep dust out
My PC has the universal 3 fans at the front door intake, 1 at the back exhaust, and 2 additional fans up top for more exhaust. The Corsair 4000D chassis is spacious enough.
3 in the front 1 in the back had me laughing.
Also, hot air is much less weight than cold air, so top fans must exhaust the air
I have two big ones at the top and the ones from my two GPUs (back), blowing hot air out of the PC. (no intake fan)
Fresh air is coming in from the front, the side and in rare extreme situations, the bottom of the back, through the PSU.
I am using a negative pressure air cooled system.
The openings for air intake are much wider, so the air is moving slow, preventing dirt from being sucked into the PC.
The air accelerates inside the PC, taking a lot of heat with it, cooling all parts that actually heat.
My CPU max temp is 47 °C
My GPU max temp is 75 °C (intentionally, but could be lowered to 59 °C)
having an intake on your radiator while it’s top-mounted is completely fine. Supplies cool air for your AIO to do its thing.
Also, remember that hot air tends to rise so exhaust fans in the upper part are more optimal
3 infront, 1 in back
1/2/3 at the top for cpu cooler radiator exhaust
A good rule of thumb is that, hot air rises a lot faster than cold air. Always have exhaust fans near the top of the case, while intake should be around the bottom. But just as he stated, there are a lot of exceptions
My top, bottom, and side fans are all intake. The rear is one 140mm fan for exhaust.
Setting your fans is something so simple, but most people make it look so complicated and overlooked
I have 3 on the front and 3 on the side as intake (all filtered) 3 on the top over an AIO as exhaust, and one on the top rear as exhaust. PSU sucks from bottom and exhaust through it's rear. Planning to make a shroud and make the rear fan an intake for the VRMs.
I find this advise productive, as with positive pressure (more in than out), suggests that, once powered off, air will, by default, be moving out of the computer, to neutralize pressure.
Turbulence is your friend when building a pc.
Another thing to consider, is if your top intake fan is really close to your top right exhaust, you may want to put them both as intake.
I have 6 intake and 4 outtake, with 3/4 outtake being part of my AIO.
I prefer a positive pressure build, in at the front or bottom and exhaust up top, this is because heat wants to rise and to force the dust out with that pressure.
This dude yapping more and I learned more in comments 😂
Also another reason to put the top fans on exhaust is because hot air goes up, so you are ensuring that the hot air is getting out of the case
I meannn, I don't really recommend this if your clumsy, have kids or if your desk area is cluttered and unorganized, but I put my fans in but I also took the side glass off. My area is fairly organized, I don't have kids (that I know of at least) I no longer have any pets and my house isn't really dusty. The PC is under my desk. I really only use a water bottle to drink out of. Soo, I felt comfortable just leaving it off for more air and "breathing room."
2 years later, I have had absolutely zero issues and my temperatures are a few degrees cooler than when I would have it on.
I recommend leaving out the fans and cooling it with cold beers
Since positive pressure is good for cooling Ive made my top fans spin like 400-500 RPM slower
I have a little wonky airflow setup but I did it cause of case restrictions
ATX case
240mm aio, front, exhaust, can hold up to 360mm aio (wouldn't fit on top due to ram restrictions)
Top 2 fans, intake
Back 1 fan, intake
I have 3 140mm in the front, a 360 aio on top, two intakes fans at the bottom and one exhaust at back
Basically, you don’t want more exhaust because you make a vacuum which makes your case dustier
1 x 120 back exhaust fan.
240 Top-mounted radiator exhaust.
3 x 120 intake front fans.
With 30 and 40 series gpu it is best to put the radiator as an intake. Because if it was exhaust orientation it will only get the hot air that is coming out of the gpu
Probably should also remind that you want both regular and reverse bladed fans
Regular fans can be your intake fans while the reverse blade fans can be your exhaust
Reminder that he advertises shady antivirus companies without disclosing it as an ad
I got 7 fans in my case just because i had spares and it fills everything out. 3x intake on the front and 4x exhaust (3 top, 1 rear). This results in negative pressure, but you can modulate the rpms so that the intakes outweigh the exhausts overall to create positive pressure. FanControl is free and lets you micro this stuff or you can change it in your bios.
I have my front and top fans as intake and the rear as an outtake for positive pressure since I have radiators on the front and top for my water cooling loop.
as a car enthusiast, I recommend using your manifolds off of your vehicular device and then installing an exhaust.
good vid. i approve
Three in the front, one in the back. That's perfectly fine.... positive airflow pressure 🤭
Three in the pink. One in the stink. Got it.
That's where my head went 😂
Use smoke or fog to find out if you have negative case pressure or positive case pressure
I have 6 intake and 3 exhaust on my aio radiator and my Ryzen 9 7900x stays nice and cool
My rule of thumb is to match all the fans and always have at least 1 more intake than exhaust. Otherwise you gotta go by cfm and many won't understand how to do that.
The fans on the top side of the case are also best for exhaust BC warm air goes up so having them as intake would be stupid.
Love your videos ❤️
“3 in the front, 1 in the back.”💀
Hey Zach will you do a video on a super underrated cooling brand called Arctic please? Their products look incredibly sleek and outperform much more expensive stuff by a mile
Top fan to the right intake top fan to the left exhaust. If you have a tower cooler. Othervice the top fan will steal airflow
That’s good to know cause I was going to buy some Corsair fans put them in the top facing down but now I know not to do that.
I have 3 front and 2 bottom 120mm fans set as intake and 3 120mm top rad fans and a 140mm rear for exhaust. Should provide plenty of fresh cold air and keep all air moving to prevent hotspots. My mobo is equiped with 2 movable thermal probes and a mic that detects fan noise in addition to the usual chip thermal monitoring and it stays near ambient temps under load on silent mode.
If you have an AIO, keep the bubbles in mind while mounting the radiator. Having g the connector at the top or pump are the 2 worst setups. This was shown in almost every pic.
1. There are arrows on the side of your fans indicating airflow and spin direction
2. Hot air rises, that's why you want the top fans to be exhaust.
3. Exhaust is more important than intake: if you only have one fan, have it be exhaust
4. More intake means less dust, more exhaust means better cooling
Actually there are circumstances when you might want your top fans to be intake rather than exhaust. For instance. You only have 2 120mm fans on the front for intake. But 1 120 on the back for exhaust, then you buy a 240 AIO and top mount it. So now youre adding 2 240 fans to the top. If you put them as exhause youll end up with negative pressure airflow.
The top fans being exhaust is also because of the fact that warm air rises. You don’t want your airflow to be fighting thermodynamics.
Intake must be more than exhaust sop that the colder air can reach to more obsecure areas where the hot components subside, also hot air is less dense than cold air so they float like helium although less than helium so generally you want to have exhaust at the back or top to suck the hot air and intake at the front or bottom to have efficient cooling and to prevent the fans to suck the hot air back in again.
EDWARD ELRIC YOOOO MY MAN
In short, front intake, bottom intake, top exhaust and rear exhaust
For Budget Gaming How about RX 580 GPU
Plz Make a Short Video on It
I find my cpu keeps better temps with 3 intake in front, 1 intake up top on the front half, 1 exhaust on the upper back half and 1 exit at the rear. That being said I have a Corsair airflow case which is pretty good at keeping out dust and I clean my pc every couple weeks.
Good to know, thanks. Im shopping for a new smaller case to fit my setup but i have 9 fans total so its a bit daunting....😂
200mm front and 120mm rear as intake then top three 140mm fans exhaust through radiator.
Three pulling from top
And three from bottom
Side in the side exhaust
I use the front as exhaust and the back as intake
Three in the front one in the back 😂 my mind instantly went steel panther . Two in the pink one in the stink 😂
So in 2022 I bought my first desktop pc, and at the time I didn’t know anything about pc, so I just didn’t know how big of a scam it was. The pc had:
I5-10400F
Asus prime H410 M-E
Corsair CV 550W 80+ bronze
Kingston Fury 16GB (2x8GB) 2666MHz
Kingston 500GB M.2 NVMe
GeForce GTX 1650 4GB
Paid almost 300 for THE 1650 ALONE( I googled and it didn’t cost that much even at launch). For the whole pc paid around 800€(keep in mind I bought it in Europe bc I live here). I’m still mad at them.
Pffft! 6 x 120mm Noctua in, 1 x 140mm BeQuiet out. Brilliant temps and super quiet. Grow a pair and build custom loops 😋
I went overboard with fans I have 9, 6 intake and 3 exhaust. Stays super cools and surprisingly super quite tho the fans only trun around 500-600rpm while gaming
I recommend watching LTT's video about how much case fans. Usually one front and one back are enough.
I think he was talking about the fan speed and how to change the RGB
I have 8 intake on the front, 3 intake on top, a and 2 exhaust on the back
Do thug shake so the pc gods help you and make you a fully bluetooth build