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Topic: Enermax TwisterStorm (Read 1409 times)

legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1068
December 22, 2015, 03:48:43 PM
#23
The damned Sleeve bearing crap I've had to deal with wasn't "my pick" - they're FAR too common on video cards, and in power supplies, and I've had to replace WAY too many of the MANY DIFFERENT BRANDS of that sort of crap over the decades.

 The fact that they NEED "cleaned" so damned often should be a bad sign in and of itself - I don't remember the last time I had to "clean" ANY ball-bearing design fan out, they just keep running and running and running and they don't DIE AND TAKE VALUABLE COMPUTER GEAR WITH THEM WHEN IT OVERHEATS BECAUSE THEY DIED VERY YOUNG.

 YOU are the one that said "suddenly" - I realise quite well that the gear will usually survive a short while after the fan dies and lets the gear start overheating.

 You also ASSUME that I only have 1 or 2 fans running - I can just look behind me and see at least 20, ONE fan going out is not going to change the noise level in my computer/miner gear room noticeable at all.



 If a sleeve bearing fan actually LASTED a year reliably, it wouldn't be so bad - but I've had WAY too many of the cheap pieces of junk die on me in a few MONTHS of use, sometimes *A* month of use. They are NOT reliable. They do NOT last. They are shit by design. There is a REASON they are cheap.

Like i said, i clean a few of them over a period of a year, and since i have software monitoring my temps, its very obvious when something has been 10c over the rest for months, its time to clean it.

They make a distinct rattling noise, just like the delta you favor so much when they get dirty. I have such fans at a different location too.

When one fail its not like its going to damage the miner either, every single miner app has temp protection, and it should not get that far anyways considering you have months to clean it when it start under performing. Also the fact i have 2 to 4 fans on every different miner and RPM is tracked on all of them.

If you want to use noisy fan, thats all up to you, but that does not make my choice of keeping my mine in the 30-40dB range a shit choice.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 22, 2015, 06:59:55 AM
#22
Fan cleaning depend a lot of the mining environnement too, not only about fan quality.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
December 22, 2015, 04:58:49 AM
#21
The damned Sleeve bearing crap I've had to deal with wasn't "my pick" - they're FAR too common on video cards, and in power supplies, and I've had to replace WAY too many of the MANY DIFFERENT BRANDS of that sort of crap over the decades.

 The fact that they NEED "cleaned" so damned often should be a bad sign in and of itself - I don't remember the last time I had to "clean" ANY ball-bearing design fan out, they just keep running and running and running and they don't DIE AND TAKE VALUABLE COMPUTER GEAR WITH THEM WHEN IT OVERHEATS BECAUSE THEY DIED VERY YOUNG.

 YOU are the one that said "suddenly" - I realise quite well that the gear will usually survive a short while after the fan dies and lets the gear start overheating.

 You also ASSUME that I only have 1 or 2 fans running - I can just look behind me and see at least 20, ONE fan going out is not going to change the noise level in my computer/miner gear room noticeable at all.



 If a sleeve bearing fan actually LASTED a year reliably, it wouldn't be so bad - but I've had WAY too many of the cheap pieces of junk die on me in a few MONTHS of use, sometimes *A* month of use. They are NOT reliable. They do NOT last. They are shit by design. There is a REASON they are cheap.
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1068
December 21, 2015, 03:47:08 PM
#20
I've had too many Deltas last 10+ years without NEEDING "cleaning".
Can't say if they'll last longer than that, I've still never had a Delta die and the oldest of them I've got would be around 12 years old.

 I've had WAY too many shit "sleeve bearing" fans that didn't even make it to ONE year before they jammed up and died - and caused the gear they were on to overheat and die as well.

 You're ASSUMING I have only used Deltas on miner gear - I was using them years before Bitcoin EXISTED.
 Does "Alpha 8045" mean anything to you?
 No, I didn't use the 80cfm screamers, but I do still have some of the one-step down 68CFM Deltas, currently in use in 2u rack-mount cases.
 

I do miss the days of Rotron metal-frame fans - I've got a couple of those that I bought used back in the 1980s THAT ARE STILL RUNNING.
 THOSE were good, reliable fans.


 Also, not all Deltas are super-noisy, just the ones that move massive amounts of air - as are ANY of the few 120mm fan models in the 200CFM+ range from ANY manufacturer.


Clearly, the fact you picked a poor quality ones make all of them crap. Its not like i've had some running silent for 3 years now or anything.(?)

Whenever i clean them (about 3 of them out of 18 each year) they then perform as quiet as ever. I never had a problem with one of them "suddenly stopping and killing whatever it was cooling" They get visibly slow, spin slower, stop faster, make noise and the temp of whatever is cooling will raise. When they start showing tell tale of needing to be cleaned, i have 1-2 months to clean them before they stop.

Its pretty easy to tell, since they are right next to me and i can't ear them. Also if you have 2 on a miner, its not like having 1 slow down is going to kill your miner.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
December 21, 2015, 03:55:00 AM
#19
I've had too many Deltas last 10+ years without NEEDING "cleaning".
Can't say if they'll last longer than that, I've still never had a Delta die and the oldest of them I've got would be around 12 years old.

 I've had WAY too many shit "sleeve bearing" fans that didn't even make it to ONE year before they jammed up and died - and caused the gear they were on to overheat and die as well.

 You're ASSUMING I have only used Deltas on miner gear - I was using them years before Bitcoin EXISTED.
 Does "Alpha 8045" mean anything to you?
 No, I didn't use the 80cfm screamers, but I do still have some of the one-step down 68CFM Deltas, currently in use in 2u rack-mount cases.
 

I do miss the days of Rotron metal-frame fans - I've got a couple of those that I bought used back in the 1980s THAT ARE STILL RUNNING.
 THOSE were good, reliable fans.


 Also, not all Deltas are super-noisy, just the ones that move massive amounts of air - as are ANY of the few 120mm fan models in the 200CFM+ range from ANY manufacturer.


legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1068
December 20, 2015, 08:24:00 PM
#18
Twister bearing, aka "rifle" "hydro" etc is nothing more than a fancy sleeve bearing type.
 I recommend AGAINST any version of a sleeve bearing on a fan.


 Manufacturer MBF ratings from most fan makers tend to be wildly optimistic, assuming lab-level CLEAN AND COOL conditions among other things - ball bearing fans tend to be the ONLY ones that actually achieve their rated MBF in REAL WORLD usage, and even some of THOSE are rated somewhat optimistically.

 That's one of the reasons "push" is almost always better than "pull" for cooling - the "pull" configuration runs the fan a lot hotter, making it a lot more likely to overheat and fail faster.

Thanks for your though, I'll take it in consideration when ill receive and test it.

It should be fine, those fans apparently are easy to clean, which is where the real problem is for real world life time of the unit. (The item description mention that the fan is easily detachable for cleaning)

Its like those GPU fans i have on my 280x, i just pop them off, clean them with a qtip, at a speckle of lubricant and they run like knew for another 6 months. (And again, 3 times now)

 I vastly prefer fans that don't NEED cleaning, as fans that get dirty and stop running tend to KILL electronic gear before you get the chance to notice the fan died.
 Ball bearing fans are a TON better at "don't need cleaning" than ANY sleeve-bearing or varient design, as they're designed to NOT NEED LUBRICANT JUST TO RUN AT ALL.


 I'll take a "40000 hour MBTF" Delta over any "160000 MBTF" piece of junk sleeve/hydro/rifle/twister type design, as the Delta might actually last that 40000 hours where the sleeve/hydro/rifle/twister/etc. type design will be lucky to make 10000 before it locks up the first time, and will probably have completely died before 20000.


Oh no, you have to clean it every 416 days, thats a shame.(?)

Yes i clean my fan once a year, and for that year, they make no noise. If you prefer using fans that are 8-10 time louder because they will do your 2 years of miner use without slowing down (they will just rattle even more loudly), then thats a-ok with me.

But i don't see how you can rationalize quiet fan lasting 1 year without needing maintenance is "crap fans".
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 20, 2015, 06:47:58 AM
#17
still you can remove fan blades of the twisterstorm...lot easier to clean.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
December 20, 2015, 06:26:50 AM
#16
Twister bearing, aka "rifle" "hydro" etc is nothing more than a fancy sleeve bearing type.
 I recommend AGAINST any version of a sleeve bearing on a fan.


 Manufacturer MBF ratings from most fan makers tend to be wildly optimistic, assuming lab-level CLEAN AND COOL conditions among other things - ball bearing fans tend to be the ONLY ones that actually achieve their rated MBF in REAL WORLD usage, and even some of THOSE are rated somewhat optimistically.

 That's one of the reasons "push" is almost always better than "pull" for cooling - the "pull" configuration runs the fan a lot hotter, making it a lot more likely to overheat and fail faster.

Thanks for your though, I'll take it in consideration when ill receive and test it.

It should be fine, those fans apparently are easy to clean, which is where the real problem is for real world life time of the unit. (The item description mention that the fan is easily detachable for cleaning)

Its like those GPU fans i have on my 280x, i just pop them off, clean them with a qtip, at a speckle of lubricant and they run like knew for another 6 months. (And again, 3 times now)

 I vastly prefer fans that don't NEED cleaning, as fans that get dirty and stop running tend to KILL electronic gear before you get the chance to notice the fan died.
 Ball bearing fans are a TON better at "don't need cleaning" than ANY sleeve-bearing or varient design, as they're designed to NOT NEED LUBRICANT JUST TO RUN AT ALL.


 I'll take a "40000 hour MBTF" Delta over any "160000 MBTF" piece of junk sleeve/hydro/rifle/twister type design, as the Delta might actually last that 40000 hours where the sleeve/hydro/rifle/twister/etc. type design will be lucky to make 10000 before it locks up the first time, and will probably have completely died before 20000.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 18, 2015, 11:25:25 AM
#15
I guess there should be a section here about Miner Tuning lawlz.
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1068
December 18, 2015, 11:22:10 AM
#14
Twister bearing, aka "rifle" "hydro" etc is nothing more than a fancy sleeve bearing type.
 I recommend AGAINST any version of a sleeve bearing on a fan.


 Manufacturer MBF ratings from most fan makers tend to be wildly optimistic, assuming lab-level CLEAN AND COOL conditions among other things - ball bearing fans tend to be the ONLY ones that actually achieve their rated MBF in REAL WORLD usage, and even some of THOSE are rated somewhat optimistically.

 That's one of the reasons "push" is almost always better than "pull" for cooling - the "pull" configuration runs the fan a lot hotter, making it a lot more likely to overheat and fail faster.

Thanks for your though, I'll take it in consideration when ill receive and test it.

It should be fine, those fans apparently are easy to clean, which is where the real problem is for real world life time of the unit. (The item description mention that the fan is easily detachable for cleaning)

Its like those GPU fans i have on my 280x, i just pop them off, clean them with a qtip, at a speckle of lubricant and they run like knew for another 6 months. (And again, 3 times now)
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 18, 2015, 05:19:10 AM
#13
Twister bearing, aka "rifle" "hydro" etc is nothing more than a fancy sleeve bearing type.
 I recommend AGAINST any version of a sleeve bearing on a fan.


 Manufacturer MBF ratings from most fan makers tend to be wildly optimistic, assuming lab-level CLEAN AND COOL conditions among other things - ball bearing fans tend to be the ONLY ones that actually achieve their rated MBF in REAL WORLD usage, and even some of THOSE are rated somewhat optimistically.

 That's one of the reasons "push" is almost always better than "pull" for cooling - the "pull" configuration runs the fan a lot hotter, making it a lot more likely to overheat and fail faster.

Thanks for your though, I'll take it in consideration when ill receive and test it.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
December 18, 2015, 04:44:48 AM
#12
 Twister bearing, aka "rifle" "hydro" etc is nothing more than a fancy sleeve bearing type.
 I recommend AGAINST any version of a sleeve bearing on a fan.


 Manufacturer MBF ratings from most fan makers tend to be wildly optimistic, assuming lab-level CLEAN AND COOL conditions among other things - ball bearing fans tend to be the ONLY ones that actually achieve their rated MBF in REAL WORLD usage, and even some of THOSE are rated somewhat optimistically.

 That's one of the reasons "push" is almost always better than "pull" for cooling - the "pull" configuration runs the fan a lot hotter, making it a lot more likely to overheat and fail faster.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 16, 2015, 09:34:32 PM
#11
Yep I made a lot of search and on paper the twisterstorm seem way better... When I'll receive it i'll make a little something.
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1068
December 16, 2015, 09:24:13 PM
#10

Yeah that one or the noctua...still I think the TwisterStorm has better stats and you may control manually the RPM

Thanks for your time.

I have the 3000 rpm noctua it is not that good on the  s-5

ah yes ? Allright. The noctua and the TwisterStorm are about the same...Will wait to receive it and if it worth the shot ill make a review.

Please do. On paper it look more performant than the S1 fans i use on some of my S5. Having a cooling upgrade while reducing noise produced would be a relief, but they look kind of flimsy compared to the fans that really does the job.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 16, 2015, 02:09:11 PM
#9

Yeah that one or the noctua...still I think the TwisterStorm has better stats and you may control manually the RPM

Thanks for your time.

I have the 3000 rpm noctua it is not that good on the  s-5

ah yes ? Allright. The noctua and the TwisterStorm are about the same...Will wait to receive it and if it worth the shot ill make a review.
legendary
Activity: 4172
Merit: 8075
'The right to privacy matters'
December 16, 2015, 01:38:03 PM
#8

Yeah that one or the noctua...still I think the TwisterStorm has better stats and you may control manually the RPM

Thanks for your time.

I have the 3000 rpm noctua it is not that good on the  s-5
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 16, 2015, 01:30:51 PM
#7

Yeah that one or the noctua...still I think the TwisterStorm has better stats and you may control manually the RPM

Thanks for your time.
legendary
Activity: 4172
Merit: 8075
'The right to privacy matters'
December 16, 2015, 01:26:52 PM
#6
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
www.DonateMedia.org
December 16, 2015, 01:20:32 PM
#5
For a S5, quieter job and keep performance.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1183
dogiecoin.com
December 16, 2015, 10:50:43 AM
#4
if you're planning on using it for cooling a setup 24/7. It is best to use a server fan instead of a regular computer fan as it will most likely last longer. But it will probably be louder.

Well... its got a 160k MTFB = 18 years 24/7.
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