I just got hold of a 160w AC-DC + DC-DC combo a couple of days ago to power my G4560/GTX1050 system and it works like a charm so I haven't even thought about cooling it. However after a long session of PUBG and running Furmark + Prime95 for half an hour I've decided to check how hot does the heatsink get and almost burnt myself.
It's my first time ever using DC-DC converters so I don't know whether it's safe or not. Strangely it seems to be perfectly stable but both the heatsink on the converter and the brick itself get REALLY hot to touch to the point where It's burning.
That was very concerning for me so I've taken the brick outside of the case and put an 80mm fan on top of it and also the converter gets cooled by a 120mm fan right now.
I want to know whether it's normal or should I just continue actively cooling them? I would like to avoid all of that mess with guts and wires outside of the case because all of that looks very janky. I'm using a CoolerMaster Elite 110a case by the way which has very poor airflow and I wasn't able to properly mount the AC-DC unit to the case using the ATX bracket because apparently the bracket is not the same version that is shown on the website and it doesn't fit with the AC input installed. I didn't even know there were different versions of the ATX bracket before ordering it.
It's my first time ever using DC-DC converters so I don't know whether it's safe or not. Strangely it seems to be perfectly stable but both the heatsink on the converter and the brick itself get REALLY hot to touch to the point where It's burning.
That was very concerning for me so I've taken the brick outside of the case and put an 80mm fan on top of it and also the converter gets cooled by a 120mm fan right now.
I want to know whether it's normal or should I just continue actively cooling them? I would like to avoid all of that mess with guts and wires outside of the case because all of that looks very janky. I'm using a CoolerMaster Elite 110a case by the way which has very poor airflow and I wasn't able to properly mount the AC-DC unit to the case using the ATX bracket because apparently the bracket is not the same version that is shown on the website and it doesn't fit with the AC input installed. I didn't even know there were different versions of the ATX bracket before ordering it.