Althornin said:
Would you get off of your f@nboi highhorse for a momeent and stop the witch-hunt? Stop looking for f@nboi's and you might stop seeing them. If you cant see how this HSF is "above and beyond" standard cooling, then you are blind. I guess next thing is, you'll be telling us that YOU are a thermal engineer. Oh wait... You arent. So iguess you wouldnt know whether or not one would be needed to discuss this thing.
And i'll tell you this - i dont need a "pizza engineer" to tell me if a pizza tastes like shit or not. You figure out the analogy.
Show me where I made an assertion that it didn't go "above and beyond" standard cooling. Who gives a damn? If I buy a new sports car, you can bet it goes above and beyond the standard exhaust system of a Honda Civic.
What I said was, heat, dust, and fan issues are not simplistic. I am not a thermal engineer, but I know one, and I know that more goes into deciding how to get heat out of the system than the level of discussion going on in this forum. I mean, do you honesty believe Nvidia engineers didn't consider issues like DUST and MTBF for the moving parts of the system?
Listening to the way people talk in this thread, it's almost like they imagine the following conversation:
Engineer #1: "Gosh, Wally. ATI released a new card, with 256-bit bus and 8 pipelines. Hey, our card ships in a few months, but let's go redesign it at the last moment to beat ATI."
Engineer #2 (Wally) "Golly Gee, Gee-Whiz Herman. We'll also need to overclock it way past what we though! Oh, I know, I'll call up ACME HeatSinks INC and slap on the biggest fan we can find!"
Enginee #1 "Great, let's ship it!"
The point is, the design of the cooling system on the NV30 was not a last minute decision. It was designed months ago and put through lots of simulation of the effects, including vibration, sound, airflow, dust, failure rate.
You just don't slap together these things at the last minute based on what your competitor is doing. If you can't understand that, then you are blind. So before start talking about fan failure rates, super-hot exhaust, or dust clogging up the system, you better do the math.