Re: Do you think case volume affects cooling?
- From: PeterC <giraffenos.pam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 31 May 2008 20:45:49 +0100
On Fri, 30 May 2008 22:27:02 -0700, Timothy Daniels wrote:
"PeterC" wrote:
Timothy Daniels wrote:
Considering these factors,
especially the fans that are dedicated to individual components, simply
getting air into and out of the case "efficiently" is not the ultimate goal
in providing cooling - as non-intuitive and non-"green" as that may
sound.
A classic example of 'noise' improving 'signal'.
The 'adhesive' layer of air is useful for other purposes: fluid logic and
the Coander effect is one.
Hmmm... "fluid logic". Care to explain "fluid logic" and the
"Coander effect" and how they would be used to control cooling ?
*TimDaniels*
I did say 'for other purposes', i.i. not meaning cooling.
[Pneumatic] Fluid logic is similar to electronic logic in some ways. The
Coander effect is simole: when a stream of air is 'attached' to a surface
it will stay attached until changed by an input pulse of air.
--
Peter.
You don't understand Newton's Third Law of Motion?
It's not rocket science, you know.
.
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