levster Posted September 14, 2010 Share Posted September 14, 2010 You've got to love the price - $1.00. Shipping, though is about $18! They are learning from eBay! Quote Link to comment
vexhold Posted September 20, 2010 Share Posted September 20, 2010 We are working on 120mm fan wall bracket. The following picture show the sample. ETA is early October. Norcotek has a camera that takes pictures in the future... they should sell that instead of PC cases. Shweeet. You can pre order 120mm fan bracket at http://www.ipcdirect.net/servlet/Detail?no=258 We are working on 120mm fan wall bracket. The following picture show the sample. ETA is early October. Boo to "Fans not included" Quote Link to comment
eroz Posted September 20, 2010 Share Posted September 20, 2010 Norcotek has a camera that takes pictures in the future... they should sell that instead of PC cases. Shweeet. Haha! they have the day first, then month, then year on their camera settings. Quote Link to comment
JustinAiken Posted September 20, 2010 Share Posted September 20, 2010 $15 shipped for me, not bad... not preording though, because I might be moving soon, don't know where I'll be in October.. Thanks to Norco for making this necessary upgrade for cheap, good move! Happy customer here! I'm glad it doesn't come with fans, I'd rather use my own choice (probably some Noctuas) than pay for included fans I'd never use.. Quote Link to comment
Ri-Vier Posted September 21, 2010 Share Posted September 21, 2010 Hi, I am the distributor of Noco products for Europe. I will have the new 120mm Fanwall somewhere mid October. You cannot pre-order now. I do not have all the Norco products on stock (yet), but on the website, at the details you will find the stock at the end of the page. Please let me know if I can do something for you or if you have any questions. Regards, Richard Mulder. http://cybershop.ri-vier.nl/ Quote Link to comment
calvinandh0bbes Posted September 21, 2010 Share Posted September 21, 2010 Norcotek has a camera that takes pictures in the future... they should sell that instead of PC cases. Shweeet.Haha! they have the day first, then month, then year on their camera settings. Europe puts the month first, we put the day first. I think the US is actually in the minority, but not sure on that one. Quote Link to comment
BRiT Posted September 21, 2010 Share Posted September 21, 2010 It would make much more sense to use YYYY/MM/DD format. Anything else doesn't sort properly. Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted September 21, 2010 Share Posted September 21, 2010 Norcotek has a camera that takes pictures in the future... they should sell that instead of PC cases. Shweeet.Haha! they have the day first, then month, then year on their camera settings. Europe puts the month first, we put the day first. I think the US is actually in the minority, but not sure on that one. You mean US puts the month first, right?! Quote Link to comment
PhilH Posted September 23, 2010 Share Posted September 23, 2010 Norcotek has a camera that takes pictures in the future... they should sell that instead of PC cases. Shweeet.Haha! they have the day first, then month, then year on their camera settings. Europe puts the month first, we put the day first. I think the US is actually in the minority, but not sure on that one. You mean US puts the month first, right?! That's the way we do it at my house.. (South Texas) lol Quote Link to comment
calvinandh0bbes Posted September 23, 2010 Share Posted September 23, 2010 You mean US puts the month first, right?!yeah, I said it wardsback. Quote Link to comment
bubbaQ Posted September 23, 2010 Share Posted September 23, 2010 This is not a PWM fan. PWM fans use 4-wire. Nooooooooo. PWM can be used on 2, 3, and 4-wire fans to vary the speed. Pin 1 in ground. Pin 2 is voltage, and that pin is modulated on/off to do PWM fan control. Pin 3 is sense -- i.e. the speed reading, and not used to control the fan. Pin 4 is a signal for fans that do their own PWM internally, to vary the speed, w/o modulating the voltage on Pin 2. But you CAN vary fan speed using PWM for 2-pin and 3-pin fans. Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted September 23, 2010 Share Posted September 23, 2010 bubbaQ, that's true but all manufacturers call PWM fans those with 4-pins. Maybe because of the 4th pin *and* the ability to do their own PWM control? Quote Link to comment
joshpond Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 Just received my 4224 along with the 120mm fan plate but.... the middle fans aren't that loud. My box will be kept in the pantry so a little noise isn't a big deal. But what about the 2 fans on the rear, they are the ones making all that noise. what have people here done about those 2 back ones? Left them unplugged/off and if so how does that go for cooling? Changed them? I don't really know of any 80mm fans that move that much air as I believe they are twin blades rotating in different directions to increase air flow. Thanks Josh Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 I don't really know of any 80mm fans that move that much air as I believe they are twin blades rotating in different directions to increase air flow. Twin blades, are you sure? With only a couple of disks you may turn them off, however you need them if you fully populated the 4224. Quote Link to comment
bubbaQ Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 Now if they'd just cut a hole for a 120mm side venting fan (or two!) it would be perfect. Quote Link to comment
mifronte Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 I just installed the Norco 120mm fan plate in my RPC-4224 (it was shipped with the 80mm fan plate). I have three Delta AFC1212DE 120mm fans spinning at 2500 rpm. I replaced the two back fans with Nexus SP802512H-03PWM 80mm fans spinning at 2200 rpm to cut down on the noise. I have 15 drives, but have not assigned parity yet and so I do not have temperature readings for a parity build. I hope the two Nexus can exhaust enough air. If not, I will have to look into getting Delta 80mm PWM fans. I agree that two side 120mm fans would be just dandy. Quote Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 I don't really know of any 80mm fans that move that much air as I believe they are twin blades rotating in different directions to increase air flow. Twin blades, are you sure? With only a couple of disks you may turn them off, however you need them if you fully populated the 4224. I don't know about the 4224, but the 4220 stock plate fans have blade shaped fins oriented in the counter direction to the fan blades (stationary part of the fan housing.) Makes it look like there or two sets of counter rotating blades. Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 I don't really know of any 80mm fans that move that much air as I believe they are twin blades rotating in different directions to increase air flow. Twin blades, are you sure? With only a couple of disks you may turn them off, however you need them if you fully populated the 4224. I don't know about the 4224, but the 4220 stock plate fans have blade shaped fins oriented in the counter direction to the fan blades (stationary part of the fan housing.) Makes it look like there or two sets of counter rotating blades. Agree, they look like, but they are not twin bladed. Quote Link to comment
joshpond Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 Yeah sorry that's what I meant, 2 blades but only one spins. It increases the noise due to the disturbance in the air flow. Has anyone replaced these two rear fans without affecting cooling much at all? Thanks Josh Quote Link to comment
cylon Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 My case arrived this week with the 120mm fan bracket. I have three Delta fans to install but want to reduce the possibility of vibration noise so have ordered some of these rubber mounting pins (can't find anyone that sells them in Australia): http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270691039717 I have a Seasonic X750 PSU but it doesn't have enough molex connectors for the HDD backplanes. It comes with three modular cables, two have three molex connectors and the other has two. I have three options (the third one may be dodgy) for powering the rest of the backplanes: 1. Somehow source two more Seasonic modular cables with three molex connectors on them (might have to contact Seasonic as I can't find anyone that sells the cables separately to the PSUs) 2. The PSU also comes with two SATA power cables each with three connectors on them, so I could use six SATA to molex converters 3. Purchase six splitters and connect them to the two modular cables with three molex connectors on them. One physical connection to the PSU would power 12 drives, this seems like a really bad idea. The Seasonic X750 uses a single 744W 12V rail so accidentally overloading a secondary rail won't be an issue. Are there any risks involved with powering 12 drives off one connection on the PSU? Quote Link to comment
jortan Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I have a Seasonic X750 PSU but it doesn't have enough molex connectors for the HDD backplanes. It sounds like you're trying to fill both molex connectors on each backplane - You only need to connect one per backplane. The second connector is only used if you have a redundant power supply, to keep drives operating should one power supply fail. Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I have three Delta fans to install but want to reduce the possibility of vibration noise so have ordered some of these rubber mounting pins (can't find anyone that sells them in Australia): http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270691039717 I wouldn't recommend using these for high CFM Delta fan as the fans are too powerful. Also, connect power from your PSU only to one side of the backplane as the second is for redundancy only in case you have two PSU's connected to different power sources. Quote Link to comment
Rajahal Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I have a Seasonic X750 PSU but it doesn't have enough molex connectors for the HDD backplanes. It sounds like you're trying to fill both molex connectors on each backplane - You only need to connect one per backplane. The second connector is only used if you have a redundant power supply, to keep drives operating should one power supply fail. Actually, with the 4224 it is recommended that you power both ports. I used basic molex splitters to achieve this. Quote Link to comment
levster Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I have three Delta fans to install but want to reduce the possibility of vibration noise so have ordered some of these rubber mounting pins (can't find anyone that sells them in Australia): http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270691039717 I wouldn't recommend using these for high CFM Delta fan as the fans are too powerful. Also, connect power from your PSU only to one side of the backplane as the second is for redundancy only in case you have two PSU's connected to different power sources. I would disagree with you regarding the "not using the second power connector". Please refer to my very frustrating experience that has definitely taught me a thing or two about those additional connectors. http://lime-technology.com/forum/index.php?topic=8629.msg87013#msg87013 Since using additional connections I have had zero problems with my 4220. Lev Quote Link to comment
starcat Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 Never had any problem on any 4220/4224 with using half of the power molex. This is also the official recommendation by Norco. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.