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Ultimate Dual Fan for Pi3

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
pi coolingcooling fancooling
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  • E
    Ecks @caver01
    last edited by 18 Sept 2017, 06:19

    @caver01 I know that one fan would be more than enough but this company i think wanted to do it this way just for certain cases that doesn't have the ability to stick on a fan like the NES/SNES cases they have out there.

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    • D
      DD-Indeed
      last edited by DD-Indeed 18 Sept 2017, 22:40

      Found this fresh video from Youtube, looks really promising:

      I'm ready to order those, but I try to find them from a sort of place where I could get those copper plates to lift it up a bit and to have better thermal transfer to the cooler.

      Update: Got them all, the fan kit and the copper plates, from Volumerate.

      My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

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      • R
        Rion
        last edited by Rion 18 Sept 2017, 22:51

        FBNeo rom filtering
        Mame2003 Arcade Bezels
        Fba Arcade Bezels
        Fba NeoGeo Bezels

        D E 2 Replies Last reply 18 Sept 2017, 22:58 Reply Quote 1
        • D
          DD-Indeed @Rion
          last edited by 18 Sept 2017, 22:58

          @rion

          Good for people who have space to have that. Other than that, you can get it done more easily.

          My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

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          • ?
            A Former User
            last edited by 18 Sept 2017, 23:18

            Just ordered one of those dual fans. Ship date is about a month away though. :/

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            • E
              Ecks @Rion
              last edited by 19 Sept 2017, 04:15

              @rion That kind of cooling is cool but would cost you a lot more just for making that because what i was showing costs around 10$ Canadian and buying the copper plate with the heatsink that size and also buying the materials for that case for everything to fit because without it everything would just fall out of place would cost you about double.

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              • D
                DD-Indeed
                last edited by 22 Sept 2017, 07:06

                Dual fan is now on its way, I'll post some info and pictures to this topic as well, once I start to build them in. I need to order that thermal glue too, but that's something I'll do locally to get good quality stuff. I propably need to cut one of the copper plates into smaller piece to fit into the GPU chip.

                But about testing, I know that there is those stress testes that can be done internally, but can I monitor the temp at the same time ?

                My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

                F 1 Reply Last reply 24 Sept 2017, 18:26 Reply Quote 0
                • F
                  FatWhiteLump @DD-Indeed
                  last edited by 24 Sept 2017, 18:26

                  @dd-indeed ExplainingComputers has a good video on testing temperature with Rapsbian.

                  D 1 Reply Last reply 24 Sept 2017, 18:33 Reply Quote 0
                  • D
                    DD-Indeed @FatWhiteLump
                    last edited by 24 Sept 2017, 18:33

                    @fatwhitelump

                    But that requires a boot to OS, right ? So basically, I could use another SD card with OS installed to do those tests and once I've done them, I can put the RetroPie SD back and it's ready to go. But, are those overclock configs saved only on the SD ? Meaning that I would need to use same setup for the benchmark as well.

                    My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

                    E 1 Reply Last reply 24 Sept 2017, 18:45 Reply Quote 0
                    • E
                      Ecks @DD-Indeed
                      last edited by 24 Sept 2017, 18:45

                      @dd-indeed You can use putty on your PC to connect onto your Pi which will give the same terminal for you to put in your commands which you can play a game on your Pi at the same time the most powerful kind and see the temps on your PC which is what i usually end up using when i am testing out newer things like when i installed my single little fan with the 2 heat sinks,

                      D 1 Reply Last reply 24 Sept 2017, 19:00 Reply Quote 0
                      • D
                        DD-Indeed @Ecks
                        last edited by 24 Sept 2017, 19:00

                        @ecks

                        Allright, that sounds reasonable. I have the machine now next to my PC anyway in a test bench. Gonna get back to this whet I get the kit I ordered.

                        My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

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                        • topic:timeago-later,7 days
                        • ?
                          A Former User
                          last edited by 1 Oct 2017, 20:13

                          Got this in the mail a couple days ago. It’s cooled my Pi 3 considerably. Cut temps by 10-15 degrees celcius, depending on what I’m doing. Quite happy with it.

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                          • P
                            PetroRie
                            last edited by 1 Oct 2017, 20:18

                            I would recommend it only if you're going to overclock your Pi, else it's not really needed.

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                            • ?
                              A Former User
                              last edited by 1 Oct 2017, 21:00

                              It has other purposes than overclocking.

                              If you have a case that runs hot, this will help. This is exactly why I got it and it’s been great. Can finally keep the lid of my case on.

                              C 1 Reply Last reply 1 Oct 2017, 21:02 Reply Quote 0
                              • C
                                caver01 @A Former User
                                last edited by 1 Oct 2017, 21:02

                                @livefastcyyoung Yes, not to mention the fact that if you are running emulators, or ROMs that push the limits of the Pi3, I noticed an immediate difference in just adding a heat sink. Any cooling, whether active or passive will be of benefit if attached correctly.

                                My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                P 1 Reply Last reply 2 Oct 2017, 12:42 Reply Quote 0
                                • D
                                  DD-Indeed
                                  last edited by 1 Oct 2017, 23:28

                                  I should get mine finally next week, I decided to go with regular thermal paste instead of that thermal glue. I've been thinkin about, that I could just use hot glue gun to lightly glue the kit down from the sides. It would stay still, but would be also easy and safe to remove later. I'll post pictures of how I went with it later on.

                                  My soul rests, when I hear the PS1 boot music

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                                  • P
                                    PetroRie @caver01
                                    last edited by 2 Oct 2017, 12:42

                                    @caver01 said in Ultimate Dual Fan for Pi3:

                                    @livefastcyyoung Yes, not to mention the fact that if you are running emulators, or ROMs that push the limits of the Pi3, I noticed an immediate difference in just adding a heat sink. Any cooling, whether active or passive will be of benefit if attached correctly.

                                    I had only once heating problems and that was during a hot summer day, I;ve took the top cover off. The thing I don't like is that these heatsinks are way too small because of the cases. You can use a 40mm 40mm heatsink with a fan but you have to "mutilate" your top cover.

                                    E 1 Reply Last reply 6 Oct 2017, 22:26 Reply Quote 0
                                    • S
                                      spruce_m00se
                                      last edited by spruce_m00se 10 Mar 2017, 13:41 3 Oct 2017, 12:40

                                      alt text
                                      Laugh away, but she plays quake 3 arena all day without going over 45C, and thats in a 28C ambient temp.
                                      It sure not a space saving design though.

                                      C T D 3 Replies Last reply 3 Oct 2017, 15:58 Reply Quote 0
                                      • C
                                        caver01 @spruce_m00se
                                        last edited by 3 Oct 2017, 15:58

                                        @spruce_m00se I'm not laughing. That's great. Did you power the fan externally? USB? or did you pull it from a 5v rail pin on the Pi? I would consider this myself.

                                        My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

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                                        • S
                                          spruce_m00se
                                          last edited by 3 Oct 2017, 16:42

                                          Its a 12v fan, I have a 12v supply in the arcade cabinet that runs the RGB mood lighting and will soon run the car radio im going to use to augment the "jukebox" functionality as thats what I use most, I have the 12v supply on a relay board controlled by an arduino that also controls the power on and off of the tv and the volume, it will soon also power down the pi via gpio. the plan is to add temp probe to control the fan and I have done initial tests with a micophone to auto adjust the volume so that when one rom or song is louder it will auto turn it down.

                                          but yeh the fan is 12v in a 3d printed duct

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