Pretty sure the rad in this is only 92mm. The entire case is 4" (101.6mm) wide, so there's no way a 120mm rad/fan would fit.I'm just wondering, does a single 120mm Rad will provide good cooling performance for both GPU & CPU?
Pretty sure the rad in this is only 92mm. The entire case is 4" (101.6mm) wide, so there's no way a 120mm rad/fan would fit.
Anandtech gives the dimensions as 6" x 4" x 12" (152.4 x 101.6 x 304.8mm, or 4.7L).ah,, I thought it was 120mm Rad, well I was browsing their website, but I can't Find the spec for project spark
That pretty much goes without saying. I think MXM cards are already using binned GPUs that are more efficient than the desktop models, and Digital Storm is probably doing some "tuning" (read undervolting/clocking) on top of that, to keep thermals under control. As a system integrator it's a luxury they have to be able to carefully select and tune parts to min-max performance in a small package like this. Case designers don't get the same luxury, since we basically have to design for worst-case scenarios and lowest common denominators (otherwise people will get upset at you when their parts overheat).with 92mm rad, i think OCing the CPU and GPU won't be recommended
Thanks, im slowly making the rounds and catching up on what everyone has been up to. Been a rough time the last month so ive been putting things on the back burner which included SFFn and my current projects unfortunately.Welcome back @ChainedHope
Happy to have you back, @ChainedHope .Spoiler because off topic reply
Thanks, im slowly making the rounds and catching up on what everyone has been up to. Been a rough time the last month so ive been putting things on the back burner which included SFFn and my current projects unfortunately.
Anandtech gives the dimensions as 6" x 4" x 12" (152.4 x 101.6 x 304.8mm, or 4.7L).
That pretty much goes without saying. I think MXM cards are already using binned GPUs that are more efficient than the desktop models, and Digital Storm is probably doing some "tuning" (read undervolting/clocking) on top of that, to keep thermals under control. As a system integrator it's a luxury they have to be able to carefully select and tune parts to min-max performance in a small package like this. Case designers don't get the same luxury, since we basically have to design for worst-case scenarios and lowest common denominators (otherwise people will get upset at you when their parts overheat).