squirrellydw Posted September 14, 2010 Share Posted September 14, 2010 I just ordered mine, fans NOT included. My question now is can I use a temperature controlled fan with this? http://www.ipcdirect.net/servlet/Detail?no=258 Link to comment
kingpin Posted September 14, 2010 Share Posted September 14, 2010 how is this only $1 or am i reading it wrong. is this the deposit for the preorder? the 4020 and the 4220 might be the same, but the 4224 is bigger. how can this bracket fit all of them? i would love to get one too, but i need to see and actual production model of this. Link to comment
squirrellydw Posted September 14, 2010 Author Share Posted September 14, 2010 Not sure but my total was about $18 with shipping. The 4224 is not any bigger, same case. 19x25.5x7 It does NOT come with fans. Link to comment
dyrewolfe Posted September 14, 2010 Share Posted September 14, 2010 http://www.ipcdirect.net/servlet/Detail?no=258 120mm fan wall bracket for RPC-4224, RPC-4220, RPC-4116, RPC-4020, fans are not included. (Pre Order, ship in October) Link to comment
dyrewolfe Posted September 14, 2010 Share Posted September 14, 2010 Not sure but my total was about $18 with shipping. The 4224 is not any bigger, same case. 19x25.5x7 It does NOT come with fans. btw, $18 shipped is a decent deal I think. Link to comment
squirrellydw Posted September 14, 2010 Author Share Posted September 14, 2010 Just heard back from Norco, it DOES support temp controlled fans Link to comment
squirrellydw Posted October 3, 2010 Author Share Posted October 3, 2010 Anyone that ordered or is ordering this, what fans do you plan on using? I am looking at Vantec, I have used them before just not sure if I should use temp based fans or not Link to comment
actionfreak Posted October 4, 2010 Share Posted October 4, 2010 I need to order some fans too. I ordered everything else of my new build yesterday. Link to comment
mifronte Posted October 4, 2010 Share Posted October 4, 2010 I am in the midst of building my Unraid server with the Norco RPC-4224. I hit a snag in that the 120mm fan wall bracket will not be shipping until October 20, 2010 and the wires of the 80mm fans that shipped with the unit is too short to reach my motherboard fan headers. I plan on using the Delta AFC1212DE-PWM fans. According to starcat on this forum, this fan has enough static pressure to keep all 20 drives cool under load and yet can be slowed down via the motherboard PWM feature to be quiet when the server is not under load. The downside of this fan is that it is kind of expensive for a new one. However, I plan on testing a refurbished fan from eBay for $10. The only caveat is that it is terminated with the Dell 5-pin instead of the standard PWM 4-pin. However, since the fan is a genuine Delta AFC1212DE-PWM, I plan on modifying the termination to see if it will work with the standard PWM 4-pin fan header. Link to comment
squirrellydw Posted October 27, 2010 Author Share Posted October 27, 2010 Just want to let everyone know, mine just shipped Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted October 27, 2010 Share Posted October 27, 2010 No email or tracking number, but I just went and checked my order status and mine shipped today as well. Link to comment
joshpond Posted October 27, 2010 Share Posted October 27, 2010 Mine was posted today too so will have to see how it goes. Going with the Arctic cooling F12 pwm fans that you can daisy chain to gether to go on one PMWM mobo connector. Josh Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted October 28, 2010 Share Posted October 28, 2010 AFC1212DE-PWM'S just got delivered. Hopefully, the fan plate will show up tomorrow (most things that ship from California tend to get here in 3 days) and I can get it all installed and tested. Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted October 29, 2010 Share Posted October 29, 2010 Fan plate is here. As far as I can tell the plate "snaps" in. The predrilled screw holes in the plate in no way match up with the predrilled screw holes in my 4220 chassis (although I just ordered and received my 4220 recently from newegg, it still has the SAS connectors all the way to the side instead of towards the middle like newer ones. The fanplate has the SAS cable holes towards the middle as can be seen in the first post of this thread.) There are some slots cut into the plate the line up with indents caused by screw holes on either side of the chassis. The plate slide nicely over these and the rotates an "snaps" into the top. On the bottom it is butting up against the motherboard tray. Edit to add: There is an issue with the fanplate (or at least the way I have it installed.) It is slightly bowing the sides of the 4220, making it impossible to get the lid on. Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 So in order to make this work properly in my 4220 I had to: 1) Trim the upper corners of the fanplate so no contact is made with rail tracks on the chassis 2) Drill holes on either side of the fan plate to match up with the upper set of case holes that protrude into the case (the lower set of case holes are already accommodated by slots cut into the fan plate.) 3) Drill holes in the case to match the upper set of holes on the fan plate, so now the fan plate is actually attached to the case via screws. With these modifications, the fan plate is now solid and I can put the cover on. Link to comment
JustinAiken Posted October 30, 2010 Share Posted October 30, 2010 My fanplate got here yesterday... but now I don't really need it, because winter started here In another month, it will probably be so cold I can turn all the fans off completely... Link to comment
levster Posted November 1, 2010 Share Posted November 1, 2010 Matt, Any chance you can provide pics of what you had to do to make this bracket fit? Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 I'll see what I can do with out pulling the fan board back out. Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 The way I have it installed, picture one is looking at the fan wall from the hard drives. Pictures two and four are looking at the fan wall from the mother board side. Picture 3 is looking at the side of the outside of the chassis at the location where the fan wall is installed. I used the same color paint edits in all 4 pictures to show what coincides with what. Black- Trim down the fan wall for the chassis lid rail indent (indicated by the green arrow in 2) and across for the chassis lid rail top rail Blue- Drilled hole in side of chassis to match tapped holes in fan wall. Two screws, one on each side. Was doing this at 1 in the morning and more concerned with containing the metal filings from drilling then where the holes were actually going. Will likely re-drill at some point to get the fan wall exactly vertical, but for now it is close enough to not want to deal with it for a while. Red- Drilled hole into side of fan wall to match indent from tapped hole in chassis side. (drilled into the folded side of the fan wall that can not be seen in picture 1) Green- Already present slots in fan wall that match indent from tapped hole in chassis directly below tapped hole in chassis for which I drilled red holes Link to comment
joshpond Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 Hi Matt, How old is your Norco case? I've got my fan plate but I haven't fitted it yet as I'm waiting on a PWM extension cable but it looks like mine lines up including the screws. My case is the norco 4224 that I only recently purchased here in australia. I'll let you know when I try and fit it in. Josh Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 A month old, but it still has the SAS connectors on the back plane all the way to the side so it may have been old stock. I believe the 120mm fan wall was designed for the 4224 and they indicated it would fit the 4220 (maybe with out sufficient testing.) Link to comment
joshpond Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 My SAS connectors are in the middle so that could be it. Maybe the fanplate would fit a newer 4220. Josh Link to comment
levster Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 I'll see what I can do with out pulling the fan board back out. Matt, Thank you very much. I'll be taking my "older" 4220 apart later on today. Link to comment
Matt Foley Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 If I knew it didn't fit before starting the process I would have: 1) Set the wall next to the outside of the chassis (accounting for the chassis bottom) and marked the rail indent bottom location on each side of the fan wall. 2) Set the wall on top the chassis (top to top) and marked the rail top on each side of the fan wall. This would have allowed the material to be properly removed prior to any attempt at installing the fan wall and been much cleaner cuts. Link to comment
talmania Posted November 2, 2010 Share Posted November 2, 2010 I just got mine a week ago and the SAS connectors are all on the right side (when looking from the back) so I guess there's still old stock floating out there. I was hoping the fan plate install would be a much more smooth process than you've described Matt. Thank you very much for the pictures and explanation. Link to comment
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