3 Tips for Keeping a PC Clean (Long-Term)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 24 гру 2024
- SPONSOR: Snag an OEM Windows 10 Pro key and use code 'SKGS' for a 25% discount: bit.ly/3nfdVmg
Let's talk about how to keep your PC clean and free of dust long-term!
⭐ Consider supporting us on Patreon! / gregsalazar
Shop great PC cases discussed in this video:
be quiet! Pure Base 500DX: geni.us/rjXldzF
Fractal Design Meshify C: geni.us/fBQDn
Phanteks Eclipse P600S: geni.us/EH3i
🎬 My studio gear on Amazon:
Sony a6600 (Primary): geni.us/k8VBToq
Sony a6400 (Secondary): geni.us/24nqw
2x Pixio PX277 Prime 165Hz IPS Monitors: geni.us/bCg4nD
Neewer LED Lighting Kit: geni.us/9VTXr0
Audio-Technica AT2035: geni.us/xvQc
Yamaha MG10XU Mixer: geni.us/d4VvGM
Neewer Microphone Arms: geni.us/1w5Sx2Y
Arrowzoom Sound-Damping Foam Panels: geni.us/EKFxZc
📱 Follow me on social media:
TWITCH: / gregsalazar
FACEBOOK: / gregsalazaryt
TWITTER: / gregsalazaryt
INSTAGRAM: / gregsalazaryt
💻 Join our public Discord server: / discord
DISCLOSURES: All Genius links are tied to our Amazon Associate account, from which we earn a small sales commission. Links containing a 'bit.ly' reference forwarding to Newegg are tied to our Rakuten account, from which we earn a small sales commission. All sponsored links and comments will contain the word "SPONSOR" or "AD." Any additional revenue stream will be disclosed with similar verbiage.
#GamingPC #CleanPC - Наука та технологія
Petition for Greg to make a ceiling-mounted PC...
Yesss
You won't triple dog dare me 👀
@@GregSalazar Ok I'll triple dog dare you Greg.
@@GregSalazar I septuple dog dare you!
Signed
You forgot the 4th factor. Keeping your house clean. Your fans can only drag in what's actually there.
So true, same for all those dirty people with their consoles getting all the dirt inside hahaha
Most dust in a home is actually dead human skin cells.
@@aaronmunn2918 incorrect. Some will be, but to suggest most is, is ridiculous if you just stop and think about how much dust there is after a week of no cleaning your home. Also... how do you account for the levels of dust you find in abandoned buildings? Don't believe everything you read on the internet.
Google: - This it English? No, It's Korean!
Can you make a ceiling mounted pc that has a really really big cooler so it also works as a ceiling fan
I would like to see a massive water block and rad that uses the ceiling fan for a fan.
lol that's a pretty cool idea. would be best if the PC doesn't depend on it for cooling though, or if it can spin slow enough so you don't always have to feel the fan.
Nah just stick the pc near air conditioner for MAXIMUM COOLING or just fuking dip them inside pure water lmao
LMAO PLEASE.
I cleaned my pc last week, and I already feel like I need to do it again…
me every 2 weeks
time to take these tips to heart
or time to start cleaning your room as well
I have a 220T from Corsair and I feel your pain. Need to clean the filters weekly lmao
@@HazewinDog I do clean my room, my problem is my dogs. 😂 plus my pc is close the the ground cus my wife didn’t want it on the desk.
@@tychi5916 I have the same case, it’s like a vacuum 😂
I keep my PC on a vented stand under my desk, with a bottom to top airflow pattern. My case also has fantastic filtration. After 2 years, there's barely any dust in it.
Vented stand?
@@Dracossaint It's a monitor stand with a perforated top. Helps my PC breathe. It even has a drawer for extra cords and junk.
www.amazon.com/SimpleHouseware-Metal-Monitor-Organizer-Drawer/dp/B075KP5JLH/
bro what is your case? must be really small
@@CaveyMoth ahhh i figured it was something similar. but i was hoping for a postive pressure system with a semi-hermatic seal a little bit. Usually that's what words like vented bring to mind
@@danirizki7325 Cooler Master NR200P. It's kind of small. I originally had a Q500L, and that fit, too.
I remember when I bought my first "prebuilt" PC (I chose all the parts myself, but let the company I bought it from assemble it), I just chose a budget midtower case that I like from its looks from the front. Incidentally, it had great airflow with only 1 intake and 2 exhaust fans, with the cpu cooler being one of them, and a foam filter in front of the intake fan. I opened the case for cleaning I think about a year, year and a half and was pleasantly surprised at how little dust made it inside. I mean, the amount of dust could only be comparable to I think 1 months of daily use with the PC on the floor (I had it on my desk).
“When’s the last time you cleaned behind your screens”
*me lookin at the swiffer refill I threw out last night after cleaning behind my monitor*
had to break eye contact with the screen, I cleaned behind them last night found stuff that I thought was gone for good.
@@tomr3422 same lol I looked behind my tv on the ledge where the hdmi plugs are and there was like half an inch of dust on it lelelelelelelele
One thing that I learned about 16 years ago was panty hose/nylon stockings can be cut up and be used as a filter medium. It's crazy, but it works, especially if it's stretched just right. Last I checked, they were available in black...
4:58 - the calculation for positive or negative pressure by number of fans doesn't work with a filtered intake case - filtered fans will move air at c. 1/3 to 1/2 the rate of the open-grille exhaust fans, hence *2 or 3 intake fans = 1 exhaust fan* (of the same size and RPM).
This is very true, i was annoyed with my PC getting so dirty every month, so i threw in 2 be quiet 140s as intake, and i saw no more dust build up in the case, only in the proper intake filters was there any dust. Plus gpu temps went down, win win.
You are supposed to clean a PC? I thought the dust protected it from heat loss and activated the inner room-warming features.
👁👃👁
Ur the type of person to ask someone why ur mirror looks so ugly
Dust is combination of little particles, as long as theres a hole they can enter
can't tell if this is satire or not lol
I'll use a duster can or battery-operated blower, but I'll be damned if I'm going to take apart EVERY. SINGLE. COMPONENT. in the case every so often to literally wash it out like that and then have to wait forever for it to *perfectly* dry before reassembling everything. Screw that.
Built my first PC by hand this past September and I chose the Corsair 4000D Airflow edition to build it in. I'll admit that I'm guilty of putting it on the floor due to simply not having enough space in my room for a bigger desk, but the built-in dust filters at every major entry point for air have made monthly-ish cleanup an absolute breeze, and have done an amazing job at keeping dust out of the internals. A quick wipe of the dust filters and an extremely quick spraying of the internals with compressed air is the worst I've ever had to deal with, I highly recommend it or Corsair's refresh on that line of cases, the entire lineup of 5000D cases!
I can testify, had negative pressure for a while, my pc looked like an old shoe box, got two fans in the front and an exhaust now, it's looking mint
I got two fan intakes and three exhaust. Two intakes at the front, two exhaust at the top and one in the back. I got two maglift filters that came with my case. It has help keep dust out for months at a time if I keep the filters clean
5:45 Dude you’re 1000% correct. I’ve never thought about the small change in pressure inside the case but it makes perfect sense. Props on thinking outside the box.
I guess buying an air filter and putting in my office aimed to the front of case was a a win win. 😁
I have an open air case, the Inwin 925. I do a thorough dust cleaning once a week. I find it therapeutic
Best tip would be : vacuum your room and house about 2 times per week. And don't use rugs they accumulate hair, dust particles and allergens That is the best tip. My IT guy always says he has never seen a cleaner PC and I told him why he says that is the best thing you can do to help your PC
Got a Meshify C. Three 120 mm in the front, 4x120 mm on the radiator up top (push/pull) for exhaust and one 120 mm on the rear for exhaust. Probably overkill, just kept adding more stuff after the initial build a few years ago. Live in Orlando, too, but honestly a blast with my Data Vac every six months keeps it pretty clean :P
My previous case was pretty amazing at keeping dust out but I also had positive air flow. For anyone interested the case I'm talking about is the Corsair 780t and as long as you clean off the filters every couple of weeks it virtually stays super clean. In the 7-8 years that I used it as my main pc I had to fully clean it only 3 times tops and yes there was some dust and dirt in it once i took it completely apart for my new build but on all of the visible areas not a spot of dust build up and some minor build up in the rad and between the grills but I couldn't recommend that case more if you're looking to tackle dust and maintain a decent airflow. Let's hope my new case stands up to the 780t I now have the 5000d AF and it has some big shoes to fill but if its anything like my last Corsair I have little doubt in it.
Made everything he says in his video and can confirm it works just as he said. Built my pc 15 months ago an have been using on my table ever since. Never got it cleaned or even opened, my temps are the same as the day I built it (I've made a few teaks on them day one), but I can see a very thin dust layer above pretty much everything inside the case, but my down front fan is stuck with a dense amount of dirt that is starting to take a shape around it lol. 15 months without even opening it, I see that as an absolute win.
Had my fx 8300 system in the snow edition of that versa case. It was so bad, but looking back i have grown to really appreciate it. I learnt most of what i know about modding from that case, and most of what i know about overclocking from that cpu. It was my worst and my best pc memories.
Get a MERV 8 filter for your home HVAC system. We've had far less dust in our PC's since we did that.
I don't keep PC's on a desk because the single biggest measure you can take to deal with PC noise is get it away from you- especially away from your head. I keep it beside my desk on the floor. I haven't noticed the dust being any different than PC's on a desk. But probably the most sensible approach would be to put the PC on a low stand of some sort, and keep the area around the PC clean.
Also you should put your pc in a super low traffic area if possible. (Like a well vented large closset). And placed 4ft+ off the ground.
Thanks for this, I think it’s making a difference. It’s on the desk now and the sidefan is now pointing in to create positive pressure.
I live in farm country down south (already hitting 90 degrees (F) here in May). The dust is crazy here. With a 10 fan case (Lian Li o11 Dynamic XL), that dust can be murder. So I have my system on a shelf ABOVE my monitors. It's base feet nearly 6 feet off the floor and the top of the case is about 6 inches or so from the ceiling and indeed it helps keeping the dust build up to minimum. I can go about a month before I need to clean the filters and clean inside every other month or so. Also my space in limited so the location helps with that too. However the one con is that heat rises of course so the system runs a touch warmer but not bad at about 1 to 2 degrees C warmer vs desk level. A fair trade-off for a cleaner system IMO. Plus the fact that dirty systems run hotter, which pretty much makes it breaks even in that regard.
... I have 4 dogs, people walking in and out all day with dirt all over their shoes... we country here and I keep my side panel off. with only one fan on the back and a fan on my video card, it still does not get all that dirty, I clean it every few years with an air blower and it has been running smoothly since 2014.
Just upgraded to the evga Gold G6 750 psu and was about to look into a bigger case, when I thought about the dust... but now I know it is not as dusty as possible.... 0:05
I hate cleaning out my PC so I built one that has a 16 x 20 inch furnace fan filtering all the air coming in. This required case modification and careful sealing of any air leaks to ensure that 100% of air coming in was filtered using a real filter, not those porous screens that come with cases. I also made sure I have positive air pressure.
8:10 the graphics card will suck air from the pci openings in every case. Thats the shortest way, even if you have 3 fans in front. Ans it makes the gpu cooler in practice.
A lot of what you cover is why I consider these cases with the glass panel sides to be dipshit rubbish. I've always been a fan of the 10" side fan... probably why I consider the Rosewill Thor the current pinnacle of case development, with the old TT Element G running a close second.
10" fan maintains positive pressure through the rest of the case. It can spin at lower RPM's whilst moving more air, meaning it is quieter. There are so many advantages to it, and this "bling bling" lighted see-through side nonsense is pretty much the enemy.
I've also found it handy to use actual HEPA filter material instead of the silly little drill plates. Means your PC can do double-duty as a air filter, and if you just attach them to the outside (adhesive velcro FTW) they're easy-peasy to take off and clean.
I put on table add lot's of fan proper aur flowing and postion.
6 intake 2 exhaust.
8 fans all quite good position.
My house was good but recently a construction is going one the moment i open the window or go to the balcony God too much dust,
My case has good filters.
Though, I vacuum the inside once a week,
Running pretty cool,
i'd rather have 100% airflow with more dust than 50% airflow with less dust
I'd rather have 25% airflow with less dust, as long as performance isn't impacted and temps are well under control.
You can have 100% airflow with less dust if you just get a proper case.
I personally have a Meshify C since it released a little over a year ago and there’s practically no dust build up. There’s just enough to swipe your finger and notice a slight color different, but without checking you’d never notice.
It’s way better than the Define R5 I have.
High airflow cases are by far the best option to go with in a PC as they tend to have the better overall dust filtration than other, cheaper cases.
Don’t spend $50 on a case that you’ll have to rip apart and clean every month, spent $100 or more on a decent case and you’ll get better airflow and thermals and you won’t have to rip it alert to clean it of dust way less frequently
@@rotor13 nzxt cases are quite good and they only cost a hundred bucks
@@jamesdonnelly7194 there are alot better options for cases than nzxt, infact most nzxt cases have poor thermals. Phanteks or lian li are much better options
@@TheSectric phanteks p360a, is that good?
Just came here after watching Jay put chocolate milk in a loop.
Your logic is sound, but the whole floor thing depends on a lot of variables. Where you live, how often you vacuum/dust, how well sealed your house is, humidity, pets, furnace filters, even how good your hygiene is. I've got systems on the floor, under desks, on top of desks... and they all collect about the same amount of dust. I don't have to clean them very often. But With the recent renovations I've been doing, none of them were spared. Even the one mounted to the bottom of the desk looked like it had been through an ash cloud from a volcanic eruption. Drywall dust is the worst.
Very informative. I've just bought an ramesses 310, and the airflow is none existent, So I got the old hand drill out and made a cheese grater out of the side panel, pop 3 120 fans as intake and it should do the job,
I have 11 120mm fans in my Lian Li Snow White Mini LOL. I took off all those screen filters because they're very restrictive, there is enough flow now that dust doesn't get a chance to collect.
Great vid and great advice my dude. I always tell people let NO intake opportunity go to waste. Many cases have fan vents on the bottom that go unused. Even just one more intake can make a huge difference especially if someone is in a high dust region.
Me having laptop : Interesting........
my biggest saver of dust is the electric air duster. I have a xpower brand one. but pretty much any half decent electric air duster works. It is up front alot more then just a can of air but then you can dust more often and not worry about burning through cans of air when you do so
Is it a good idea to power down my pc every night or when I leave for work to help mitigate dust collection? I typically leave it on 24/7.
I have a Fractal Design Define R5 case with 2 140 mil fans in front, 2 140 mil fans at the bottom, all 4 pull air in.
The only exhaust fan is mounted at the back to a 120 mil AIO radiator.
The power supply is isolated, and has a silent mode, so it doesn't even run its fan most of the time.
The case sits on my desk next to the monitor. Dust buildup is minimal to a point I don't need to clean it for 6 months.
What about a PC case placed on a stand on the floor? Would it be ok or would it still need to be placed on the table? I dont have much space on my table and no space to place a bigger table in my system area. Any help and suggestions would be appreciated!
I reverse the rear exhaust fan (using a ghetto-modded magnetic filter), with the fan on the single tower air-cooler mounted on its rear blowing toward the front of the case, a single centre-top 14cm fan very efficiently exhausts the warm air exiting the cooler. Front and bottom intake fans keep air moving around the the rest of the case, keeping the GFX and other chips on the MB cool. Effectively this creates an almost independent system for the CPU and I've found it runs several degrees cooler than with the orthodox fan arrangement (it has external air blown directly on to it). Obviously this results in a positive pressure setup, but that's the general idea with filtered intakes - the PC can go months without needing cleaning.
ETA >> the reversed exhaust (now intake) fan ends up almost 'stacked' on the CPU fan, which isn't ideal (unless they're contra-rotating) - to mitigate this I used a Be Quiet Pure Wings which has circular duct onto which I've slipped a circular, 4cm deep eggbox grille made of stiff black card, this turns it into a 'vane-axial' fan. The grille converts the angular (spinning) motion of the air into a straight, high velocity (and hence high-pressure) axial flow directed at the CPU fan (which is good!). It also stops the harmonic interaction of the two fans (faint, weird 'moaning' noises at certain RPMs).
I put my PC in an old TV cabinet and took the doors off, so dust cant settle down from above and doesnt get pulled in from the front as much. So far the mesh front of the case is enough to stop the dust and a vacuum is enough to clean it off the front.
Especially if you're a streamer, get that floor PC up on the desk as close to microphone as possible. Ideally with the exhaust fans pointed directly at the mic. Viewers really appreciate the ASMR constant fan noise! Multiplayer chat buddies will too! /s
On a serious note, positive pressure FTW! Just do it, your CPU and GPU will thank you.
I keep my tempered glass panel removed. I have a 240 aio mounted on the top to cool my 5900X and the 240 aio for my Strix LC 6800 XT is mounted on the front (mesh, Lancool 2 Mesh case). That's it, 4 fans total, 2 per aio and the temps are excellent. Dust will of course collect as it's inevitable but regular maintenance keeps things clean and working in optimum shape.
Sometimes that glass can actually help airflow, as it helps the fans direct the air to follow the path. If you were to leave the glass off, I'd put both AIO's to intake, as then they both get cooler air, and it can vent out of the open side.
An extreme solution would be to design and build intake trunking using a car type full flow air filter, just like in your car.
I still have an HAF X and not going to change it. All 200mm fans were replaced by 230, even where they didn't fit, I made them fit. Also I added a 140mm fan in place of the 3 5.25" slots on top and one on the floor, where it wasn't supposed to be one, feeding fresh air directly against the gpu. All filtered fan slots are intake. The top fans no longer exhaust air. The only one exhausting air is the back fan and the port near the pci expansions. All fans run on 12v but the rear one which because of the massive positive pressure cannot run at 12v because it spins faster than it should and becomes too noisy, or I should say noticiable over the noise the other fans make.
Going to change all 4 antec bigboy triple speed to bitfenix spectre pro 230. Air escapes so fast that I can feel the air one meter away from the back of my PC.
There are also 'mounts' to hang the PC under your desk, then there is no dusty surface anywhere nearby. I did this for years and my PC barely needed cleaning dust out. It does block any vertical ventilation though, and there are very few cases nowadays with power button at the front.
Where you live in general also factors in, you may happen to live in a dusty neighborhood with gravel roads, unless you plan on moving to a better neighborhood, your PC is going to collect dust real quick regardless of the cases or case placement, leading to frequent clean ups.
these tips added up all contribute to keeping the PC cleaner longer. I'd say positive pressure is probably the biggest one. I had a floor PC, and maintained positive pressure with the intakes filtered, and I had to clean the thing about twice a year, and the dust build up would be constrained to the filters, and then using a blower to blow out the rest of the air inside the case.
In combination with not leaving the PC on the floor would be ideal.
I know this isn't why my PC died, but thanks a lot Greg. I decided to move my PC from next to my desk, to the desktop. Everything was running fine and I decided to race a round in Dirt 5. I'd completed my match, when all of the sudden the PC shut down, tried to reboot and kept going through a reboot cycle. I pulled the plug, removed all but one RAM stick and managed to get into a Asus Tek system fail screen. I went to add another stick and the thing went from trying to boot, to just cranking up the fans on the GPU and never going through a boot cycle. This is almost exactly what happened to my rig back in 2015 and now I'll have to go through the RMA process of replacing the 9900K and the Asus Maximus Hero XI motherboard. So depressed!
I do all this already, its great for temps and very low dust build up.
I actually bought a file cabinet for the PC case to sit on. A small 2 drawer one and I never told the Mrs. this, but I bought it for the PC alone, putting documents in it was never my intention :P but eventually important papers come along in life and its nice to have a place to put them in. Works great for PC parts storage too!
I have the Be Quiet Silent base 802 with the mesh panels installed. The case also has easy to clean filters in the front, top, and bottom so I like that. I created a positive pressure with 7 case fans. I installed 3x Noctua 140mm Chromax front intakes that can push more air than the exhaust fans. With all the fans I can run them on lower power so that the noise level is low and also helps keep dust down.
@Rondo James Yes I know opening the case and blowing house fans at it is one solution to excess heat. I used to do that in the 90's when I was benchmarking some seriously old hardware, like the 3dfx Voodoo 3 and 5 graphics cards and the very first Nvidia GeForce graphics card. It's not something I care to do with my current system though and cases have evolved and can give ample cooling and filtering at the same time now.
I've had several Dell XPS systems and unfortunately they haven't done much evolving over the years. When you buy your own system and build it properly, you want to be able to enjoy it and enjoy looking at it too. Leaving the side panel off isn't a good look and is completely unnecessary if your system has been built properly. I've seen the difference between unfiltered cases and filtered and I'll take the filtered.
@Rondo James something to consider is, if your liquid cooler is 10 years old then that is probably past it's lifetime if it is which could make for some warm temps. I never got into liquid cooling myself, Currently I am running the Noctua Chromax U12A cpu cooler and it does a great job.
Best case is the one that makes easy to clean, easy front removal, easy filters removal, etc. Just blowing some air each month an your case will be perfect clean
What about neutral pressure? I got 3 140mm intake, 1 140mm exhaust, 280mm aio set to exhaust
Neutral pressure is fine, but having positive pressure is still better since it's stopping dust from getting into places you don't want it to be in like through little cracks in a side panel or something like that. Keep on mind that you can also achieve positive pressure by setting the exhausts to a lower overall rpm than the intake fans.
My #1 suggestion is to not smoke or vape indoors. Not only is it bad for your health, as someone that treats cancer patients on a daily basis, but I have dealt with a few PCs used by smokers and they are by far dirtier than any other PC I've cleaned. The smoke and vapor particles allow all sorts of dust and hair to stick to the surface residue left from smoking or vaping. And in general smoke and vape particles give something for dust to cling to while in the air as well.
Also thank you, I asked for this video on twitter….Though I asked in a more “what setup is appropriate for what situation” more from a cooling angle than cleanliness but thins still helps with that
I needed this. I've got a PC that is a dust magnet.
Trust me the PS4 pro is a friggin dust vacuum
Do you think having an air purifier around the pc would have any affect at all?
you can also buy a case that has a HEPA filter inside, i think its a silverstone case i don't remember exactly
for me i kept my pc on the floor to free up desk space. i used a tray above the pc intake fan and a tray below with wheels to block the dust from setting on top and elevate the pc from ground for intake to remove intake of any dust on the floor as dust usually set on any surface prolong to exposure usually require light cleaning after 3-4 months as im a clean freak this technique saves alot of hassle in maintenance and keep glass panel clean
If you’re living where your family cook a lot, try to vent out all the greasy air out because nothing attracts more than a oil. I always cover the console or PC with a cloths and vent air out before turning them on again
Number 1 rule for me: Don't smoke near your PC. Fans will pull in all the stray ash in to the PC no matter what and dust will be annoying to clean since cigarette ash is super fine.
Greg, iv'e been wondering this for quite some time: you see, i first built a computer for my mom even prior to building mine, i bought a cheap case that has space for 3 120 mm fans on the front, that plus the one (included) rear exhaust fan was enough for her basic system (and to create a good possitive preassure), however, for mine i bought a q300l from Cooler master, a mini itx case, and it is symmetrical on the top and front, both having space for up to two 120 mm fans each, but, because of this, i wanted to put some exhaust fans on top due to the hot air rising, and then i realized there is a problem with the air pressure if i wanted it to be possitive ... since i would have the rear and the two upside fans as exhausting fans; and considering the build only has 2 front fans, it's preassure is negative, but... i really don't know which fan position should i change, because if i do with the rear fan, it would create turbulence due to it being directly opposed to the front fans, and i don't know if i should only change the direction of one of the upwards fans, since, well, hot air rises and that stuff... i'm kinda new in this world of pc building and wanted to know what do you think of this situation and what whould the best adjustment be for the case's air preassure to be possitive.
just run with two intakes and make sure the vents for exhaust is clear. also wire management.
what direction should the top fans blow inside the case or outside?
You can adjust dust settings in the Bios.
I have the phantex p300a mesh case with 2 arctic p14's (140mm) for intake with an AIO, and 2 arctic f120 bionix (120mm) for exhaust. I rarely have to clean my PC, because the dust mainly builds up on the front metal mesh panel and slightly on the radiator. Very thin layer of dust, just have to wipe off the metal mesh every now and then. The inside of the case gets very little dust particles
My PC lives on the bottom shelf of my computer desk along with my UPS. I clean its dust filters every 3-4 months and pull it out from under my desk for a more thorough cleaning roughly every other year. The next deep-clean (little more than vacuuming all of the dust bunnies that have made their homes inside ports and unused slots) will be when I upgrade my i5-3470 in the coming weeks.
I actually have a large air purifier I use for my room positioned underneath my PC, which is sitting on my desk. It mostly intakes air only pushed out thats already been filtered.
I have a Fractal design R5 case, it has fantastic mesh dust filters, and as the case is off the floor, it amazes me how clean it stays inside, practically dust free. I would recommend any case with good mesh filters as a guide, unless you don't mind regular cleaning of your fans etc.
I have an old Alienware Area-51 7500 case that I still use. Not a lot of ventilation as compared to recent designs, but it's looks cool, But does have dust collection on the sides.
I always clean the exterior of my pc everyday. Open it every month and clean the internals - dust blower, clean the fans etc
House is near a busy road so dust will always come inside the house. No AC, I only have a stand fan to cool/ventilate my room so I always clean the house regularly to avoid dirt/dust build up
No a/c? Where do you live?
I feel like you should have mentioned cooler component selection require less air flow to begin with, which in some instances could mean zero to low air flow.
Well i got 1 200mm fan in front intake plus another 140 mm om top intake. 2 X 140 mm fan blowing out. All with filters. So seems fine. Not much dust considering i live in an Troll cave.
This video was really helpful. I kind of wish there were illustrations of 'air flow' or ' negative and positive pressure' build ups so idiots like me could understand lol, But I am sure if I look it up I will understand more.
Hopefully I will be able get my PC of my floor, soon!
I would add that if you have a rad in the roof you should add an exhaust fan to compensate for the restriction the rad causes. IE: 3 unimpeded intakes and 3 exhaust on a 360 rad you should have one extra fan for a 4 x 120mm total exhaust (and vice versa if you are using it as the intake).
We use small plastic file cabinets Greg to help keep our PC's or Rigs clean.
I used to put all PCs on the floor to reduce the noise heard to the person using the PC however today a typical office PC with no hard drives and minimal fans can go on the desk. A GPU heavy system however I still put on the floor depending on the noise. At work we have lots of users using AI to do research. And some of these systems will have 2 or more high end nVidia GPUs.
I bought a new monitor the other day and have had to move my tower off my desk to the floor. I am definately going to get something to raise it up somewhat. Great video as always.
I've only had my PC for 2 years, its like he's speaking a different language, I love it
So best would be completely isolating inside and have aio or water cooling radiators outside of case.
the BeQuiet 500DX is my ideal case, I wanted one for my build but in my country it's is not available... it has the looks, the I/O, and most importantly the airflow... shipping it internationally from Amazon will cost me around 400$ which is not something I would do.. so I opted with the NZXT H710 in white and I will custom drill the front and top for better airflow. I know from 500DX to H710 sounds silly, but hey that's what available here and what you have to deal with when you live in a 3rd world country, we do not have access to the cool stuff you guys have :( !
I built little carts that keep the cases slightly higher than ground, I can't stand to have the desktop on the desk, it takes too much space and I don't like RGB (and I don't own anything with it so no case "staring" here).
I do always have filters on the intakes and have more intake fans than exhaust, so positive pressure won't suck in air from the cracks. Also I'm always using 140mm fans with low RPM in idle (never more than 600rpm). I always have 2 front fans and a bottom intake, a rear exhaust and a single top exhaust over the cpu/vrm area.
Even if I clean the filters after a few months, I can limit myself to a yearly internal cleaning, mostly by air blowing. I've never, ever had the ginormous clogs of dust I've seen in your channel, nor on rads nor anywhere internally. And I have two cats, the house is cleaned on a weekly basis (both de dust and pavement cleaning).
I fear the usage in Anglo-American countries to have carpets everywhere, leads to more dust in the house than using ceramic pavement or wooden parquet as it's in use here.. also.. honestly, many PCs that are sent to you have never seen any form of cleaning at all, and if those people do that to the case, I guess they won't clean their houses at all, or do it like once a month or even less frequently, wtf xD.
Haven't cleaned my PC in 6 years, never shut it down either or use sleep mode. Only times it restarts is after an update. Works fine so far
Somehow fan speed on my case affects whether the pressure inside is lower or higher. Low fan speed will force air enters through the pci covers, and vice versa.
Actually dust only deposits when it stops moving. Ik could be a blocking filter, or it could be in turbulent situation.
- with a dust filter: positive pressure, because the only path to the case inside is through the filter. And clean the filter from time to time (important!)
- without a dust filter: mostly negative pressure. I'll try to explain why.
Blown air is turbulent, sucked air is laminar (opposite of turbulent). In a laminar flow dust won't deposit as fast as in a turbulent situation. If your air flow is in a negative pressure, most air is sucked in and you'll have more laminar flow inside the case and thus less deposit of dust. Just try to have the holes where the air is sucked on the side of the case, where there is less dust.
Another thing: the more fans you have, the more air travels through your case, which will create more turbulence inside your case, and thus more dust build up. So try to have just enough air flow for cooling, and don't put to much fans (unless you really like the aesthetics of a lot of fans).
Luke did an LTT video (one of his last video's at LTT) with tests: ua-cam.com/video/dLX54ounENY/v-deo.html
I think in the case he used, negative pressure had the best results!
PS: Trust me, I'm an HVAC engineer.
I keep my PC on the floor because my desk is practically cardboard held together by toothpicks and wishes. I give my PC a light haphazard dusting every couple months. My temps are pretty great. I have a Cooler Master H500 and my GPU (2070S STRIX card) idles at 28-30c tends to hover in the 50s under load maxed out 65, my 9700k is under a NOCTUA u14s with one fan and tends to top out at 51-54c under load. This is after nearly 3 years with this PC and I keep it on most of the time. (No mining)
1:18 I mounted mine with a bracket under my desk. If you're looking to have a clean desk but not have it sitting on the floor.
I had this absolutely stupid idea a while back and part of me still wonders if it's possible... What if you made a vacuum-sealed liquid-cooled pc? If it's liquid cooled, you could keep the radiators and fans in a separate (open-air) chamber, although you'd really have to pay attention to make sure every possible heat source is in contact with a cooling block since, y'know, physics. It'd remove any possibility of dust buildup on the components as well as prevent corrosion on anything from moisture.
I always clean my dust filter every weekend to prevent dust build up .
My room is dusty AF, PC near the floor, BUT undervolted CPU, negative pressure, and only very slow fans :)
Will consider adding an intake fan or 2 with a filter someday, or just get a macbook air, or mod a mac mini into a fanless design.
Big tip: Vacuum regularly. Clean house, clean build. 👌
and dont forget to vacuum the cat, get that pet hair at the source.
but don't vacuum your pc
@@nougatpersonal unless it's one of those USB powered mini ones
1 front 200 mm intake 3 top 120 mm exhaust via aio and 1 rear 140 mm exhaust phanteks enthoo pro still cleaner inside than when it was air cooled
My o11 xl with 10 fans has been running since October and I upgraded it yesterday and other than a very small amount on the fan blades. I was surprised on how the parts had close to 0 dust on any of them.
Throw in one more tip. Do not setup your pc close to kitchens and do not smoke around it.
With frying foods comes with airborne fats and oils and like cigarette smoke will leave a tar like residue on the case and inside if the intake ventilation is more exposed to the elements.
Cleaning the pc in this form will be the worst case when these tars and dust begin to coagulate together making it a task for scrubbing and cleaning all the parts by hand.
This is also very damaging with radiators from custom or AIO coolers as cleaning out the fin stacks are not very easy to accomplish.
Can you make a video about optimizing your PC after you’ve built it? I have high-end specs, but I’m getting mid-tier frame rates. Would really appreciate a video on how to ensure your components are working at their max potential.
Check your games graphics settings first. They’re likely set way too high.
Most games will automatically adjust settings on first installation and it’s almost never correct.
Adjust your settings to suit your preferences.
FYI - setting everything to the max is the worst way to play a game because those “Max” or “Ultra” settings are usually meant for making screenshots.
I have a 3080 and a 9900k and I run games at the High Preset and changing certain settings like shadows and Anti-aliasing a little low usually lets me play most games at 120-160fps without issue.
Doom Eternal is the exception as I can run that game at 1440p and get 200fps on Nightmare graphics without even trying.
@@rotor13 I have a 10900k and 3090, but I'm only getting around 140 fps on Warzone, which is definitely on the lower side, even with high settings for the most part.
@@JackWutang i have a rtx 2070 super and thats what i get on warzone, something definitely is off.
@@JackWutang warzone 2 btw
im running the 3 140s in front for intake and 2 140s at top and 1 rear for outflow
I would add get some of those fine mesh filters for the intake fans. Sure those block some airflow, but they keep a lot of the dust out.
Specially if the case has a big holed mesh front panel.