I made a HUBLESS PC fan and it’s so loud!

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
  • I have wanted to try and design and build a PC fan for some time. I wanted it to be mostly if not all 3D printed. However, I never did because that kinda sounded boring, that is until I see the TMD fan created in the early 2000. That fan was different and sparked the idea of trying to create a fully hubless PC Fan.
    Fan Models
    www.thingivers...
    Printer Bambu Labs X1-Carbon
    bambulab.com
    bill of material.
    DC 5V-36V 15A Brushless Motor Controller 3-Phase
    amzn.to/45K8DEY
    M3x12mm Flat Head Machine Screws
    amzn.to/3qrw9GN
    uxcell 4mm Ceramic Bearing Balls
    amzn.to/3WPMAsv
    Protopasta 3D Printer Filament | PLA Filament 1.75mm | Magnetic Iron Filled
    amzn.to/45M9yEN
    BINNEKER 24 AWG Magnet Wire
    amzn.to/3WV4gmE
    MAGXCENE 50pcs Rare Earth Magnets Bars
    amzn.to/43Fg3Yb

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,2 тис.

  • @gazebodp
    @gazebodp Рік тому +1955

    Okay, this is awesome. Imagine a balanced fan with better bearings and optimized blades.

    • @Maaniic
      @Maaniic Рік тому +79

      Would it be hard to try to make it a giant maglev bearing with some magnets and the correct shape of the outer ring ? Or if you could use the drive coils themselves to hold the ring while running.

    • @aleksandertrubin4869
      @aleksandertrubin4869 Рік тому +40

      @@Maaniic I suspect magnetic field of maglev bearing will interfere with mechanics of fan itself, although I guess you can minize it by making them rather tight fitting (below 1mm distance), but reducing magnet's power (maybe even make it 2 rings on opposite sides at 45° incline). All that said, it will take quite a lot manual labor to place all the magnets, since you would probably need to place hundreds of them
      PS fans like it probably would cost quite a lot more (even if produced at scale) due to much copper and magnets being required, as well as more complicated bearings. Not to mention that lateral speed at outer edge it much faster than at inner edge, making it significantly harder to make bearings quite, on the other hand if one could nail down bearings design really well, he might potentially achieve quieter fan by removing the hub supports

    • @pinocleen
      @pinocleen Рік тому +26

      @@MaaniicMaglev requires superconductivity to operate, our current tech relies on either very low temps at normal pressure, or super high pressure at more reasonable temperatures, neither of which is very practical. It would make for a great show though.

    • @FelipeQuirce
      @FelipeQuirce Рік тому +5

      Let's create a competitor for the brown company

    • @kooskroos
      @kooskroos Рік тому +9

      A Dutch team in the ugh hyperloop competition used aluminium and magnets to levitate. It worked. Im sure one can also make a magnetic bearing with just magnets.

  • @phoenixbda6164
    @phoenixbda6164 Рік тому

    That thing moves air very nicely! I was impressed when I saw the smoke test.

  • @sadsismint
    @sadsismint Рік тому

    awwww man... I remember when this fan came out I think.
    I recall the marketing saying that it was more efficient because it didn't have a 'dead zone' in the middle of the fan. More fan area = better apparently.

  • @TheRocknRolla84
    @TheRocknRolla84 Рік тому +29

    The blur you edited in at 7:30 made me literally laugh out loud haha!
    Great video my dude! That's a really cool design! I bet if you were to machine it out of aluminum and or steel and with a little bit of lubrication you could probably bring that noise down significantly! With a little bit more enginenerding that could be a pretty sick case fan!

    • @squirreltrucking1765
      @squirreltrucking1765 Рік тому +2

      😂😂😂 I didn’t catch that during my viewing, thanks for tagging it. It’s was a sweet gag, glad I got to see it. Thanks again and I tip my hat to you sir/madam.

  • @SeventhCircle77
    @SeventhCircle77 Рік тому

    Would be sick af if a company could make a fan like this that’s silent and still flows good. Imagine not having that dead spot where the hub is.

  • @theroburrito
    @theroburrito Рік тому

    Seal and grease the bearings to address the noise. Make the fan separable from the rotor magnets to make it easier to change fan designs. Try out different fan designs like more blades, one with less center clearance, one with a hub, etc.

  • @JayFochs1337
    @JayFochs1337 Рік тому

    I feel like ball bearings raceways on both sides would help with stability. I love the aesthetic of it though! I want some for my PC! When you develop the 2.0 😂 This is a magnificent prototype!

  • @ibaneztenaciousD
    @ibaneztenaciousD Рік тому

    I wonder how a few gobs of some kind of wheel bearing grease would effect noise and take up any minute slop the bearing could've devolved from wear in. Great work Major!

  • @JohnChrysostom101
    @JohnChrysostom101 8 місяців тому

    Scythe grand tornado just came out a direct competitor to the famous noctua

  • @loki_ikol6716
    @loki_ikol6716 Рік тому

    Graphite powder lube for the bearing race should reduce dB significantly and improve speed.

  • @GreyBeardedLifer
    @GreyBeardedLifer Рік тому

    Should allocate your pm drive to the center of the fan width, and on the both rim edges have magnetic repulsive bearings

  • @HenryZinc
    @HenryZinc Рік тому

    way to go on the design! that fan is so cool looking! what about a toroidal blade design? would that help air flow at all?

  • @Rygoat
    @Rygoat Рік тому

    I kind of want to see how it performs if its even thicker for use with ducting, so it almost has a drum in the middle with a few layers of fan blades like a weird turbine

  • @djb1634
    @djb1634 Рік тому

    80 db is hearing loss range. And db doesn’t rise in a linear fashion. So 91 db is holy fuck range.

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse Рік тому

    I'd say make it out of ABS next time, use more blades and pull them closer to the center, maybe with a 5mm hole, and definitely use better bearings.

  • @TevisC
    @TevisC Рік тому

    I had this fan. It was loud! I think it was

  • @gregorykusiak5424
    @gregorykusiak5424 Рік тому

    Toroidal blades. Want to know if airflow improves. And then you go after the bearing noise.

  • @MrDbrennen
    @MrDbrennen Рік тому

    How about a small hub with bearing and have the windings/magnets on the outside rim of the fan with no outer contact?

  • @MostafaRashad
    @MostafaRashad Рік тому

    I like the design, but wouldn't the magnetic field, especially multiplied by more fans, threaten to interfere with the electronic components of whatever it is you're cooling, like an HDD or something similar?

  • @MrMegaPussyPlayer
    @MrMegaPussyPlayer Рік тому

    15:21 Hearing protection? For less than $20 you could have them to you over night.

  • @Dacraun
    @Dacraun Рік тому +305

    What I want to see is a community driven series where we try to build the BEST hubless fan together.

  • @mreroot
    @mreroot Рік тому +510

    As a "Proof of concept" type project, this is amazing. The problem is, now I would like to see what it's capable of with refinement.

    • @fuzzyturtlez8994
      @fuzzyturtlez8994 Рік тому +14

      It would definitely be a high dollar project. 120x120 ball bearings are like $40-$60. Not sure how much ceramic ones are but possibly more expensive. I think the best thing to do is make one out of CNC parts and then optimize the blade design first.

    • @AndrewTSq
      @AndrewTSq Рік тому +6

      @@fuzzyturtlez8994 wouldnt even be worse in terms of friction with that big bearing? I actually think this is probably a worse fan design than what we have today.

    • @VashStarwind
      @VashStarwind Рік тому +13

      @@AndrewTSq It is, takes more magnets and coils, plus has more friction, which is the enemy of a fan lol

    • @herrpez
      @herrpez Рік тому +4

      Not much of a "proof of concept" given that it already existed and was proven to work. But okay.

    • @Torchedini
      @Torchedini Рік тому +6

      @@AndrewTSq It is worse. If you look at swept area you lose more space on the outside compared to what you gain on the outside.
      Then the amount of loading on the bearing is nowhere near max capacity. So smaller balls if possible would be nice to have.

  • @christianmcpheeters8638
    @christianmcpheeters8638 Рік тому +384

    I think using steel ball bearings would quiet it down quite a bit, because of the resonance difference. The poly-crystalline structure of ceramic is very brittle, hard, basically making it noisy. Using a steel ball bearing along with a dry lubricant like graphite would drop the noise immensely. Maybe a resin printed channel for the ball bearings to ride in would help a bit too. This project is AWESOME!! I would love to see you take your awesome idea farther, and I am amazed at your 18 pole handcrafted motor's performance.

    • @trevormiller5058
      @trevormiller5058 Рік тому +13

      +1 for another go with some dry lube or graphite lube, such as Drop'L Do

    • @brandonbrown3600
      @brandonbrown3600 Рік тому +6

      A good PTFE base lubed would be better but dry lubes wont help with noise as much as a liquid or paste type lube although they would slow it down. Trying some of each type to compare would be a good video idea to go with other improvements.

    • @corpsemasterB312
      @corpsemasterB312 Рік тому +2

      If he could turn the channels out of aluminum that would be ideal

    • @christianmcpheeters8638
      @christianmcpheeters8638 Рік тому +2

      @@corpsemasterB312 I agree, although he did state that he wanted to keep it as 3D printed as possible.

    • @stephenhood2948
      @stephenhood2948 Рік тому +2

      Def some sort of lube on the bearings would help. I was thinking something like a grease, but know that would make a tremendous mess. Graphite is a good idea, though it will still be hard to keep whatever lubricant you use on the bearings and not all over everything else.

  • @markanderson3740
    @markanderson3740 Рік тому +77

    a few drops of lightweight silicon grease would reduce the bearing rattle a lot. you could print little air scoops on the inward slope that would cool the bearing as well. great design. the center open region might be creating the lower FPM reading. i can envision the air packet leaking off the tips. or go with the latest 'bound tip' from MIT and have the blades meet in the middle in some convincing symmetry like a spiraled needle. I started a freeCAD course a while ago, inspired by your enjoyment, i'm not sure i got past lesson 2 before i got distracted by QGIS and rest servers. I might have been the poster child for ADHD if they had that in the 70s :) carry on, I will live vicariously through your tinkering.

    • @crackedemerald4930
      @crackedemerald4930 Рік тому

      I don't think the bearing should have any chance to get dust in them, especially with oil on them.

    • @JohnSmith-dp2jd
      @JohnSmith-dp2jd Рік тому +2

      It might, but a large part of the noise is just going to be from the surface finish and a loose fit. Think about riding a bike with really thin tires on cobblestones, every bump in the rolling surface will jostle things around. The best finish you can get off a printer is going to be like the surface of the moon compared to the ground finish you normally get in a bearing raceway, and you're not going to be able to hold tenths to get a snug fit and low eccentricity either.
      It's a really cool project and proof of concept despite all that though.

  • @randybehrmann5454
    @randybehrmann5454 Рік тому +190

    You should try the fan with some lube in the bearings.

  • @Micharus
    @Micharus Рік тому +320

    I'm quite impressed with this. As you noted late in the clip, maybe it does need to be run in a bit before it reaches it's full potential. A very small amount of machine oil or possibly 'white lithium grease' on the ball race may help to reduce noise. The fact that the whole unit is 3D printed, including the 'iron' cores is what I find really interesting, the boost in performance if you used real iron cores instead could be significant although a LOT more time consuming to set up. I'm guessing there are a few metal impregnated plastics available.

    • @KareemFloat
      @KareemFloat Рік тому +42

      plastic and grease dont tend to work well from my experience. graphite powder is his best bet as it's very slick without any viscosity.

    • @JonLake
      @JonLake Рік тому +14

      There's some 3d printing material that you can kiln/burn and you end up with a 100% metal print. The tomatoe rocket engine yt guy that I can't remember his name (...Integza) used some in his last rocket video.

    • @michaellew1297
      @michaellew1297 Рік тому +14

      @@KareemFloat PLA is not affected by grease, and greasing 3d printed parts is commonly done. (Plastics are not plastics.)

    • @shotgunwarrior7219
      @shotgunwarrior7219 Рік тому +2

      @@KareemFloat farmers use graphite powder in their hoppers being pulled by tractors, when they're fertilizing or whatnot, for this exact reason to keep the hopper lubricated. should definitly be considered

    • @KareemFloat
      @KareemFloat Рік тому +17

      @@michaellew1297 the issue isnt the grease breaking it down, but rather being too sticky to be worth doing along with it also holding on to debri and making it turn to a polishing compound.
      i have yet to run a printed robot/rc where that wasnt the issue.
      edit: btw this is actually something hes tested and tried in this channel before with a multi part fan and ran into those issues and also landed on graphite being the best option

  • @Th3VenerableBede
    @Th3VenerableBede Рік тому +153

    Nice build! I remember buying the TMD hubless and thinking it was a no-brainer for my heatsink. I ran it for many years and retired that PC only a few years ago; I'm sure I still have the fan in working condition. Would be happy to send it to you if it's of interest.

    • @slimknight_
      @slimknight_ Рік тому +8

      Idk if he will respond but I should. I'm sure he'd show it.

    • @ShiroCh_ID
      @ShiroCh_ID Рік тому +3

      gotta love this so it will be bumped up
      currently the 3rd places in top comments, hopefully James will read it

    • @zsigmondkara
      @zsigmondkara Рік тому +1

      Bump.

    • @ShiroCh_ID
      @ShiroCh_ID Рік тому +1

      123 likes POG

    • @filonin2
      @filonin2 Рік тому +2

      I still have two from my old dual Pentium III system.

  • @dangingerich2559
    @dangingerich2559 Рік тому +122

    I remember when that tip driven fan came out. I thought it would be great, but it was so expensive. It never really took off because it had too many down sides. The bearing was in the hub, which was why it still had the hub, but that was far superior to having the bearing around the edge like yours. The reason the hubless design was used for the boat thruster is because water isn't as compressible as air. It's actually needed in water.

    • @devangoad
      @devangoad Рік тому +5

      Even though air is more compressible, wouldn’t having a clear channel of flow reduce the amount of work it has to do? No specialist at all just wondering

    • @ellemnist
      @ellemnist Рік тому

      @@devangoad would it be same working principle of bladless fans?

    • @redcrafterlppa303
      @redcrafterlppa303 Рік тому +4

      ​@@devangoad you could see in the smoke test that indeed air wad flowing through the hole. But extending the blades to nearly touching would probably be even better at airflow and static pressure.

    • @wahidpawana424
      @wahidpawana424 Рік тому

      ​@redcrafterlppa303 which is probably why the hubless fan does not take off. You are just trading off a centralise hub with a hub spread across the the rim.

    • @redcrafterlppa303
      @redcrafterlppa303 Рік тому +1

      @@wahidpawana424 I think technically the hubless could push more air but the large baring is killing the efficiency. Maybe if tech evolved some more a levitating version might make the hubless unbeatable and a common appearance.

  • @Aaron.Reichert
    @Aaron.Reichert Рік тому +163

    This may have been one of the most impressive things I've ever seen you do

    • @s1lv3rbordeaux47
      @s1lv3rbordeaux47 Рік тому +6

      Yeah my thoughts exactly. This is one channel I randomly seem to find in the feed & content is always quality, interesting & entertaining. Though this video is so so so more advanced than normally seen. It's amazing what has been achieved. At age 43 I have a degree in industrial design achieved in my very early 20's, during study of CAD we had our projects 3D printed in wax (yes common wax) at a cost of $500 - $900NZD no bigger in size to a computer fan. The company did choose one design to be free of charge, mine was chosen which was totally unexpected by all, as my attendance to class was not of a seen acceptable level though it didn't effect my competence to finish. Off topic a little there sorry. This does entice me a little more to purchase a 3D printer at some point in time, when funds improve or it doesn't cost the earth to only live. As no employment was ever secured from my degree, these memories are but tiny dreams I'm still able to remember. Great channel, keep up the great work. Andy, NZ.

  • @pshufb
    @pshufb Рік тому +220

    Really one of the coolest hardware channels on here. So cool seeing the effort and thought involved. You're a great communicator for us non-engineers 😛

  • @thebowtieguy777
    @thebowtieguy777 Рік тому +335

    1. replace the bearings with just wheels in the corners
    2. build the outer ring with 3 dove tails so that we can submit press fot blade sets

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Рік тому +25

      - both ideas are good, the corner wheels can easily use point/captured ball or other type of cone bearing - plain bearings for very little frictional torque.
      - the ring may need to be a little more substantial - but testing different types (of blade sets) or tip to root twist would be interesting... (also blade breadth from root to tip may be an interesting variable regarding efficiency vs effective pumping - even using a sweep from tip to root to induce extreme core velocities... hmmmm.)
      Another benefit of using thermoplastics is the blade units could be printed straight (zero twist) - at the designed "tip pitch" - and the angle set or varied through heat setting - the optimal twist may not be a simple linear twist..

    • @JETWTF
      @JETWTF Рік тому +13

      1. Replace the bearings with small sealed bearings as wheels in the corners.
      2. Build the frame as 4 parts(cut in half from front to back and side to side) so they can clamp the bearings in and then the fan hub/motor assembly.

    • @TarisSinclair
      @TarisSinclair Рік тому +12

      ​@@JETWTF The problem is that the bearings will still need to travel the whole circumference of the outer rim, which translates to much greater speed and friction than if it was a standard hubbed fan. That's not to say your ideas won't help - they would definitely reduce the noise (4 balls instead of many), but the core of the issue remains - the high friction and energy loss.
      I was thinking about a pair of magnetic bearings instead, but interference with the engine's coils might be an issue.

    • @andyking05
      @andyking05 Рік тому +5

      This
      This soooo much
      Please do this

    • @DjVortex-w
      @DjVortex-w Рік тому +1

      But what kind of wheels would they be? If they were rubber wheels it would certainly make it ultra-quiet, but the rubber would wear off extremely fast.

  • @jonathanbutler6635
    @jonathanbutler6635 Рік тому +28

    I love this idea. I’ve been thinking that the hub blocks so much potential. I think if this was done professionally or even with resin/injection molded it would be so much quieter and shake less. It may still be good to have the blades touch in the middle for strength and static pressure

    • @Gractus
      @Gractus Рік тому +9

      My first thought is that the linear velocity at the centre is low enough that you’re not actually missing out on much having the hub there. But who knows, maybe it works like those Dyson fans that draw in more air than they move by themselves. Either way it would be cool to see a refined version.

    • @thatonetech5511
      @thatonetech5511 Рік тому

      He could make some steel molds and start mass production of them at that point. Injection molding is always better. Worked in that industry for a few years. Injection molds are perfect

  • @TheMetalShed
    @TheMetalShed Рік тому +147

    This is so impressive! If you can reduce the bearing noise, there’s SO much potential. You then have complete freedom with fan shape to optimise noise/airflow/static pressure. Please make more variants of this as it’s a fantastic idea

    • @_B.C_
      @_B.C_ Рік тому +11

      If he’s already using magnets, why not magnetic levitation?

    • @NiLem98
      @NiLem98 Рік тому +5

      @@_B.C_ That was the first thing that came to my mind, too.

    • @exafrost
      @exafrost Рік тому +2

      @@_B.C_ Yep, magnetic bearings would be the best choice.. but in a fan that small, it's going to require some incredible engineering. It can be done...

  • @iamdmc
    @iamdmc Рік тому +76

    Been thinking of doing this for ages! Great job! Wondering if lubricating the bearings would make it much quieter. Eventually, making a metal channel for the bearings with tight tolerances and lubrication would make it quieter and spin faster (less friction)

    • @Xerrea
      @Xerrea Рік тому +1

      Was thinking lube too and alot of it. Might even make the fan faster with less resistance in the bearings.

    • @petenikolic5244
      @petenikolic5244 Рік тому +3

      From what i have seen of 3D printed things they are not really smooth so a lot of noise will be coming off the rough surface of the bearing races and are the ceramic balls smooth enough .

    • @Victor-bw5xp
      @Victor-bw5xp Рік тому

      A grease would likely make it quieter but is likely to slow the fan down due to friction. Under light loads lube adds to friction.

  • @p4inmaker
    @p4inmaker Рік тому +15

    Cool build, and actually spun well.
    Would be cool to see a version that allows press-in fans for a community series.

  • @DPardytyme
    @DPardytyme Рік тому +13

    Love this! Loudest most over engineered fan, that's almost impractical... That's why I keep coming back to this channel!!! ❤️❤️❤️

    • @DrTheRich
      @DrTheRich Рік тому +1

      I still think the pretty one with me multiple gears was more over engineered

  • @JohnCarver3
    @JohnCarver3 Рік тому +181

    Awesome design. One slight design change you should make is to make the blade section easily removable so you can play with different blade configurations

    • @agn855
      @agn855 Рік тому +9

      I highly doubt that it’s only a slight change, but thought exactly the same. Kudos

    • @INFINITEShoobes
      @INFINITEShoobes Рік тому

      Just put on some lube it might be softer

    • @erictheepic5019
      @erictheepic5019 Рік тому +3

      @@agn855 Might be able to just out the blades, thin the wall as much as possible, then put some short dovetails on the inner surface. I think any solution that allows for removable blades is going to lose some wall diameter, but I feel like there's not much that could be done about that.

    • @stephenhood2948
      @stephenhood2948 Рік тому

      Yeah, he will def need to experiment with the pitch of the blades to see what moves the most air. A way of balancing it and quieting the bearings would help a lot as well.

    • @redcrafterlppa303
      @redcrafterlppa303 Рік тому

      ​@@erictheepic5019 or maybe a screw in hub. Where a hub with a shallow long winded winding is holding to the bearing and a blade ring with a positive screw end to screw into the hub. This way you wouldn't lose anything compared to the static design.

  • @__aceofspades
    @__aceofspades Рік тому +48

    The best build yet. That print quality is amazing. And while the fan is loud as heck, it worked decently, which is good for being a completely custom design. I want to see you run water-cooling tubing through the hole in the middle.

  • @alexandratsankova5825
    @alexandratsankova5825 Рік тому +38

    As others are saying, it would be cool to have like a mini-season of the fan showdown with this fan design.

  • @danielsigursson6215
    @danielsigursson6215 Рік тому +9

    It is remarkably well balanced. I expected it to just up and go when it was freespinning on the table but no, it just stood there and spun away. Very interesting to see what can be done with this concept.

  • @ProjectPhysX
    @ProjectPhysX Рік тому +45

    Awesome design! I guess the bearing friction is the limit on RPM, not the moved air. So you could increase blade count and make the blades way steeper to move more air at lower RPM!

  • @mobiobione
    @mobiobione Рік тому +49

    That is a beautiful piece of engineering, very nicely done! I also have trouble using any of my other printers after getting an X1CC…

  • @Ayane13b
    @Ayane13b Рік тому +14

    Did you oil the bearings at all? It doesn't sound like it 😂 also im sure it would get quieter over time

    • @tacticalcenter8658
      @tacticalcenter8658 Рік тому +2

      Oil actually slows down bearings.

    • @Ayane13b
      @Ayane13b Рік тому +2

      @@tacticalcenter8658 if you use a light oil I doubt it. Gotta remember that it's not a perfectly smooth metal ball against another piece of metal, it's on plastic. I'm certain that if the oil was able to get in-between the more porous plastic and the ball, it'd improve performance, and noise.
      In theory, in my head. I could totally be wrong though.

    • @bobbybobman3073
      @bobbybobman3073 Рік тому +2

      The usefulness of oil in bearings is a hotly debated topic, realistically my personal guess is a small amount of a light thin oil, would probably help.But I have no experience with ceramic and plastic bearings to my knowledge. But last I've heard it's very much design, application specific, along with things like material choices.
      But yeah it's hard to say, generally speaking of you lube a bearing it's using a small amount of a thin lubricant.
      That being said even properly lubed I still expect this to be able to wake the dead.

    • @tacticalcenter8658
      @tacticalcenter8658 Рік тому +1

      @@Ayane13b no its a fact in actual experiments.

    • @tacticalcenter8658
      @tacticalcenter8658 Рік тому +1

      @@bobbybobman3073 I'm not arguing anything about the usefulness of oil in bearings. Just the fact the oil slows friction.

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage Рік тому +57

    This is really impressive no matter how it performed. The way the light through the red fan made the fog look blood red was also a pretty cool effect.

  • @dadegroot
    @dadegroot Рік тому +37

    If it wasn't for the shear pain of loading bearing every time, I'd love to see this go "full fan showdown". Some different blade designs on it could be really interesting.

    • @8g00gl
      @8g00gl Рік тому +5

      I bet he could make come kind of adapter. Hopefully a hubless showdown is incoming.

    • @nalissolus9213
      @nalissolus9213 Рік тому +1

      @@8g00gl yeah, outer rim and the inner part could be separate and snap together.

  • @ILike2Tinker
    @ILike2Tinker Рік тому +20

    That is super cool! I would love to see you make a V2 with a different blade design to try and get better flow.

  • @hectorae86
    @hectorae86 Рік тому +5

    Did you try greasing the balls?

    • @Nerd21-z8z
      @Nerd21-z8z 5 місяців тому

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @tobiwonkanogy2975
    @tobiwonkanogy2975 Рік тому +40

    i recognize the determination to engineer. small mods can always improve . someone has to buy you a bag of graphite powder and some lithium for the desk. :) Thanks for another inspiring video

  • @crashmatrix
    @crashmatrix Рік тому +68

    Well damn, a prototype that actually just plain works, that's always nice to see. Well done. I could definitely go for some more experiments on this little devil, starting with improving the acoustic performance let's say 😅

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 Рік тому +4

      Being used to prototypes on other channels, I expected it to be scraping and for it to seize up or catch on fire within minutes.

    • @KostasTsakalidis
      @KostasTsakalidis Рік тому +1

      @@user2C47 Not just other channels. I myself have fried a LOT of prototypes on almost anything imaginable.. :P

  • @testbenchdude
    @testbenchdude Рік тому +18

    Dude! This is next-level DIY fan design. I had one of those TMD fans waaaay back in the day (I think I might still have it somewhere, actually!)

  • @TheWolfiet
    @TheWolfiet Рік тому +9

    I used to re wind dryers for grain bins. You legitimately did a better job than probably 75% of the people I worked with. Amazing. I would like to see this with a non-ferrous metal race for those bearings. I think you might have something here... Especially for applications in air coolers where this would eliminate the dead space occupied by the hub.

    • @Nevir202
      @Nevir202 Рік тому

      I think even a non-ferrous race would slow it a LOT as the free-spinning neodymium magnets induce opposing eddy currents as they fly past it.

    • @Erowens98
      @Erowens98 Рік тому +1

      The blades in the hub area are mostly dead space anyway though. Since the blade velocity is much lower near the center than the edges.

  • @glabifrons
    @glabifrons Рік тому +11

    A much cheaper option for the bearing balls would be airsoft BBs. I've used some cheap white ones that have an amazingly high roundness spec with good results.
    Edit: You'd have to modify the CAD model a bit though, as they're 6mm diameter.

  • @Sebastian_Athea
    @Sebastian_Athea Рік тому +24

    The hole in the middle is leaking air pressure, it works on the boats because the water rams at it as the boat moves, but for air it would benefit from different impeller design that has blades connected in the middle of the fan

    • @DominicRyanOsborne
      @DominicRyanOsborne Рік тому

      So cross bar blades with a taper from edge to core? Like a cross?

    • @djedUVprojector
      @djedUVprojector Рік тому

      This needs a two sided fan like a turbo. A large extended air scoop type blade forcing air into a sucking black hole vacuum fan on the exit side

    • @Sebastian_Athea
      @Sebastian_Athea Рік тому

      @@DominicRyanOsborne yes

  • @ame7165
    @ame7165 Рік тому +15

    that turned out great! good job sir. you could design a ring/race with v slots to allow changing of fan blades, and do a season of showdown with people designing blades for this thing
    edit: you might look up halbach array if you want to improve performance. it's a way to get more strength out of your magnets by the way you arrange them, and they're efficient because they have a strong and weak side, so the force is directed and concentrated towards your armature. to fit the magnets in this arrangement you might need to reduce the number of coils, but you'll get a side effect of bigger coils, so hopefully more torque.
    by the way, if you want lower speed but stronger torque, you can go down to a smaller wire and do way more turns of wire. if you do that, you could design some really high pitch blades with close spacing that go to the center and probably get good static pressure. if you go larger wire but fewer turns, you'll have less torque but higher speed. would be more for cfm in that case, so less blade pitch
    as for bearings, i wonder if it's possible to do magnetically levitating bearings. that would solve the bearing noise issue
    oh and i have an idea. what if you leave slots in the chassis and blade assembly for the raceways. then print the raceways in something harder like ASA which my bambu prints quite nicely. if you set it to 100% walls and no infill, and print it flat on the build plate, the grain goes with the direction of the circle, so you shouldn't end up with perpendicular lines that cause the bearings to make noise when they cross them. and maybe even add a light abrasive or even acetone and preprocess them so they end up really smooth. could probably add graphite for lubrication as i'm not sure how ASA or similar would stand up to something like lithium grease. chemistry guys will have to learn us that bit but i think oils usually break plastics down, so that was why i had this thought, but i could be wrong

  • @TerkanTyr
    @TerkanTyr Рік тому +8

    I _really_ wanna see more of this. This needs to be developed into an actual option on the market.

    • @Erowens98
      @Erowens98 Рік тому

      Doesn't really make much sense beyond looking cool though. Since the blade velocity near the center is so low its not producing much pressure/flow there anyway. If anything you're losing static pressure as air isn't being prevented from back flowing by the solid hub. And the bearing on the edge means you have to have slightly shorter blades for the frame. Meaning you get less efficient blade surface area in the same 120mm package.
      Also, at high RPMs this bearing is going to be more difficult to tolerance, which would require more expensive materials and more engineering hours, due to the extra force of the faster velocity.

  • @MrDowntemp0
    @MrDowntemp0 Рік тому +20

    Would love it if you and the community optimize the hell out of this. Better blade design will no doubt increase airflow.

  • @D3M3NT3Dstrang3r
    @D3M3NT3Dstrang3r Рік тому +14

    The fitment just shows your engineering prowess, good job. I am not sure what it could be used for considering the sound, a maglev bearing would be cool lol. I also like the flow characteristics.

    • @ИванСнежков-з9й
      @ИванСнежков-з9й Рік тому +1

      The maglev bearing could be the best feature of this design.
      I wonder if some of the maglev trains designs could be used that would not need complicated setup with sensors and controllers.

    • @dbeasleyphx
      @dbeasleyphx Рік тому

      I was thinking maglev bearings too

  • @CarlinWantsCake
    @CarlinWantsCake Рік тому +9

    Awesome to see a TMD-like hubless fan being made. Great proof of concept and being fully 3D printed is amazing. If you leave it running for awhile to wear it in and then hit the bearings with some grease I wonder how much noise and friction reduction there will be. After future iterations on the design are done I'd love to see the community fan blade designs for this.

  • @montecorbit8280
    @montecorbit8280 9 днів тому +1

    Did you try putting some sort of lubrication in there? Whether it's a little bit of oil or maybe grease?? Grease would have dampened the sound as well as lubricated it....

  • @DoubsGaming
    @DoubsGaming Рік тому +20

    I wanna see how far the blades and bearings can be optimized. I would also like to see one specifically for airflow and another for static pressure. This could actually be a competitive product because it could be made to have no gaps.

    • @Anyone700
      @Anyone700 Рік тому +5

      The most important part of a fan is the outermost diameter. The further you go in the less it matters. This is why you stuff the motor and bearings in the center. This fan design will fundamentally always move less air for a given size/power.

    • @DoubsGaming
      @DoubsGaming Рік тому

      @@Anyone700 That makes sense to a point but respectfully I am going to have to disagree. Although the first part seems true because as you go inward the rotation slows. My thinking is that the fact there is no motor in the center means less obstructions, both from the motor and the little arms that often hold it in place.
      I am fully ok with being proven wrong though.

    • @ddjohnson9717
      @ddjohnson9717 Рік тому

      @@DoubsGaming my reasoning is that putting the motor on the rim makes the fan a type 2 lever, hence need a drive that is low torque but high speed. A electrical motor is full torque all times. so if we use the motor in a type 2 lever it is actually less efficient than the hub drive. from an efficiency stand point hub drives are less fitting for the task

    • @ANIManiak89
      @ANIManiak89 Рік тому +2

      @@DoubsGaming the central part can't create significant air pressure, so the engine is placed here. "Hubless" is good for directing airflow, but can't deliver the same air pressure with an equivalent form factor, which is more important. The structural complexity is insane for a product of this type. There is no way how it can compete with "classic" design (except style).

  • @CmdrKien
    @CmdrKien Рік тому +31

    I think the reason why the original tip driven fan had the hub was two fold: first, the fan doesn't push much air through there, simply because there's no velocity there. And so you might as well keep the hub to keep the air from accidentally moving back through the center. And once you do, then it's a great place to put a regular fan bearing.

    • @simmonsjoe
      @simmonsjoe Рік тому +8

      Yeah. By doing it on the outside he's increasing the area and moving mass of the bearing significantly. Since he already has permanent magnets in place, I wonder if there is a way to magnetically float the center?

    • @ventilate4267
      @ventilate4267 Рік тому

      would probably work better if the blades touched at the center or you made a smaller fan in it like some have done in the rest of the showdowns

    • @morgan5941
      @morgan5941 Рік тому +3

      Molecular entrainment keeps the air all going the same direction. It's the same principle as an air ejector or a peri jet water eductor.

    • @No_Way_NO_WAY
      @No_Way_NO_WAY Рік тому +1

      @@ventilate4267 Connecting the fan blades in the middle would lower the overall flow. In the fog segment, you can see that there is actually air going through the center, which is sucked in/carried with the surrounding air. If you would connect the blades, you would obstruct this path without any acceleration of the air from the blades in that area. Therefore many ubless props only use short stubby blades and leave the rest empty.

    • @siveonfarcloud4190
      @siveonfarcloud4190 Рік тому +1

      The friction of the air will just pull more air with it. (its what @morgan5941 said)
      In fact he could make the blades smaller and it will still work.

  • @Space_Reptile
    @Space_Reptile Рік тому +6

    i absolutely want to see revisions of this, try lubing the bearing to bring the noise and friction down

  • @paintballthieupwns
    @paintballthieupwns Рік тому +1

    I had a fan like the TMD on a CPU cooler in 2005-6. I cant remember the brand. It was so very quiet! I loved it until the center bearings failed many years later. I LOVED THAT FAN!!

  • @t_c5266
    @t_c5266 Рік тому +1

    I think this is a solution looking for a problem. Already in a fan design the center is the least impactful to the airflow. So then you have to make trades. Driving it from the outside requires faster speeds, more bearings, more friction, a better gear ratio, and more mass. Dropping the efficiency. And really what we're after here is most is efficiency, among things like quietness, form factor, size, etc. Otherwise all pc fans would just use a 30,000rpm motor, draw 10 amps, and sound like a wind tunnel.
    Not saying innovation is a bad thing, but optimizing one parameter at the expense of many others usually doesn't pan out

  • @LazorVideosDestruction
    @LazorVideosDestruction Рік тому +10

    Now I want to see a whole season of fan showdown dedicated to making fans for this setup!

  • @the_duke1339
    @the_duke1339 Рік тому +6

    I think you'd get a lot of noise reduction with some kind of silicone or other lubricant on the bearings, I'd love to see a Round 2 with something like that.
    I think finding the correct balance of film strength and just overall viscosity of the lubricant will be the largest challenge. Using actual petroleum bearing grease would likely be too thick to allow good movement-- but maybe I'm mistaken, maybe without a centralized motor like you might be able to generate more torque to overcome the resistance of the grease. Beyond that though using something like WD40 which has little to no adhesion or film strength I think would probably provide a negligible (if any) benefit. Silicone lubricant is frequently used on plastics and would probably provide a good balance between too much and too little adhesion and viscosity.

  • @LaserFur
    @LaserFur Рік тому +29

    you are supposed to add all the ball bearings on one side and then move the core over. And then space them out and then place the cage. A little grease makes this easier since it keeps the bearings n place. Larger balls and smoother raceways would make it quieter.

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Рік тому +6

      - there are various ways these things are done, depending on architecture - your "suggested" method is common for deep grove bearings - with welded cages..
      Designing integrated raceways can be a limiting factor - as clearances may be too tight (balls too large)- and access limited for conventional methods of assembly.

    • @klmx6
      @klmx6 Рік тому

      @@kadmow My balls are also (too large)

  • @theroburrito
    @theroburrito Рік тому +1

    Since you've got more RPM than you need, and your power supply can't keep up with the motor, you should probably lower the motor kv. KV is determined by the number of windings on the coils. Lower kv will also improve the efficiency of the motor. And since you've probably got way more torque than you need, you could increase the number of blades and/or the pitch of the blades to move more air.

  • @whyjay9959
    @whyjay9959 3 місяці тому +1

    Ah, I was wondering if something like this could be done. Either like this or with a motor contained in each corner. Might have a lot of potential.

  • @0li945
    @0li945 Рік тому +9

    There’s a reason the other guys design that you shown still had a small hub and that’s to have as little mechanical parts to reduce noise.

    • @Timberwolf69
      @Timberwolf69 Рік тому +1

      That fan still was quite noisy, albeit in a higher pitch.😵‍💫😣

    • @kamenriderblade2099
      @kamenriderblade2099 Рік тому +3

      @@Timberwolf69 The issues with the old TMD fan:
      1) The TMD was ONLY made in 70 mm Fan size (Most Fans smaller than 80 mm gets loud)!
      2) They were running it at 5800 RPM
      3) I don't think they used the quality bearings that we have today, especially nice ones like MagLev Bearings

    • @Timberwolf69
      @Timberwolf69 Рік тому

      @@kamenriderblade2099 I think the RPM would suffice to make any fan loud...
      But those small fans usually are the ones with the highest pitch...

    • @kamenriderblade2099
      @kamenriderblade2099 Рік тому

      @@Timberwolf69 When PC Hardware was young and many manufacturers didn't know better. What a time to be alive.

    • @Timberwolf69
      @Timberwolf69 Рік тому

      @@kamenriderblade2099 Yeah, the first fan I put on a CPU cooler back in the days was about that size... But it never ran that fast.

  • @ShaynaLynn
    @ShaynaLynn Рік тому +10

    Glad to say I've been on board since the beginning of this series. It's been really cool to see the evolution of this project over time as well as the community participation. Cool stuff :)

  • @drstrangefart
    @drstrangefart Рік тому +22

    Dude, this is BRILLIANT. I really want to see this refined and iterated to it's best performance. You have a really good series in your hand right now.

  • @markfarrell6810
    @markfarrell6810 Рік тому +3

    I own one of those fans! lol I bought it as a curiosity and it remains as that.
    For a raw prototype, this was amazing! Well done! Even though it wasn't record breaking in air flow, I noticed immediately that the flow was exceptionally smooth without the usual back-pressure some fans exhibit. I believe that refinement of the blade pitch and overall design should provide significant improvements.
    1.) anti-magnetic stainless steel or nickel ball bearings - contact Berry Bearings or some other company
    2.) cage made from PTFE will reduce chatter in the raceway, may require cutting from flat stock.
    3.) use metal impregnated resin to make the raceways or try to find actual naked raceways of required size
    4.) final polish pass on raceways / blades and a very small dab of Teflon Butter on the cage (optional)
    5.) and finally, you'd need to do some critical balancing on the "rotor", mostly due to varying amounts of glue and small deviations in resin fill. There was a visible oscillation of the bearings from off balance stress (I'm guessing) as you passed through certain speed thresholds.
    Other thoughts:
    maybe go with fewer poles as the torque required is not significant. I will say it seems to have a very respectable startup at low settings.
    If available, consider using small round bar magnets as the retention method could be printed into the rotor.
    Consider down sizing the wire gauge and increasing the number of windings. This will increase the impedance and flux density while reducing the current required to operate the device.
    Certain devices, no matter how exactly they are designed or how precisely they are made are, at some point, subject to resonance. One such item is an X-Ray tube that uses a rotating anode inside a glass vacuum envelope (tube). This is a 3 to 5 lb chunk of molybdenum with an iridium coating on the active surface. If allowed to slowly speed up to it's optimal operating speed (10,000 rpm) it will develop a resonance between 600 and 3000 rpm with enough kinetic force to shatter the glass envelope. Boom goes $15,000 X_Ray tube. It has a very specialized startup system that boosts the RPM just before it hits resonance.
    (on an odd note, the GE CT8800 CT Scanner used a turret bearing from a tank and the rest of the scanning gantry was designed around that. lol)

  • @NorthWay_no
    @NorthWay_no Рік тому +6

    Yes! Finally someone made a fan like I've wanted. Except I was hoping for a maglev type effect with no friction and thus reduced noise.

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Рік тому

      I think you would need a center hub to be able to do that...the bearings are what is holding the blade assembly to the rest of the fan...

    • @The_Keeper
      @The_Keeper Рік тому +1

      You don't need a center-hub for a mag-lev fan.
      However, you need to place the magnets exceedingly precisely, the magnets have to extremely similar in strength, and have a very exact shaped magnetic field for it to work without the hub flying out at high RPM.
      Either that or find the strongest permanent magnets you can. That way the field might be strong enough to contain the hub at any RPM.
      Not sure if the Neodymium magnets are strong enough for that though, and stronger rare-earth magnets are ridiculously expensive...

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Рік тому

      @@The_Keeper I guess I should have been more clear, no you do not NEED a hub, but doing it without one would be exceedingly difficult outside of a lab with very precise equipment...Also it would the worlds most expensive computer fan...

  • @LerrySanders
    @LerrySanders Рік тому +5

    Would love to see an evolution of this design.

  • @TheRealAlpha2
    @TheRealAlpha2 Рік тому +4

    Very cool build! Although, I wonder if the wobble it seems to have in the start of it's movement has any affect on it's final numbers. It feels like it has more potential in it's design.
    Would that un-evenness have made it slower? Would solving that make it quieter?

  • @oskarbech-trueman5203
    @oskarbech-trueman5203 Рік тому +1

    I think that connecting the fan blades to a hollow axial cylinder in the middle could increase efficiency by eliminating vortices at the tips of the blades, while still allowing air to pass through.

  • @HaPKoMaTo3
    @HaPKoMaTo3 Рік тому +1

    I think it can be done with mag lev so it's much quiter. And less friction, and i bet there is crazy efficient balde design for hubless fan. It might actually be very good.

  • @300-blkout
    @300-blkout Рік тому +15

    This is the super cool project dude! It might be interesting for radiator fans that would benefit from having more service area being cooled!

    • @RelentlessRage
      @RelentlessRage Рік тому

      Every radiator have a gap between fan and actual fins. Air need space to spread and calm down before it enters the fins. In case of radiators Pressure and bulk airflow matters, not area. less area even better, less area usually means higher pressure - for example 120mm fans have more static pressure than 140mm fans, and radiators for 140 fans have less fins density in general (to reduce resistance)

  • @LeitoAE
    @LeitoAE Рік тому +4

    Hell of a good job with creating this.
    In terms of performance I can not really see benefits compared to traditional center hub. The most amount of air is being moved on the outer part of the fan, not the center. Here the outer space is being taken because of the motor parts, so fan diameter is smaller, like some argb fan. Still very impressed for your design that is very thin especially for a 3d printed prototype.
    For example when you look at small, 30 or 40mm fans you will see that hub takes a lot of space. Sometimes even 70% of the fan. It would be possible to make smaller hub with less powerful motor, but increasing blades in that inner space close to the center is not so beneficial. At least not enough to compensate for power of bigger and stronger motor. 😂

  • @asd4558
    @asd4558 Рік тому +4

    would love to see a resin printed version with tighter tolerances. dual bearings would also be nice

    • @dDoOyYoOuUtTuUbBeE
      @dDoOyYoOuUtTuUbBeE Рік тому

      Enclosed bearings with lubrification. Or some way to use air pressure when spinning to center the rotor?

  • @BigWhiteCloud
    @BigWhiteCloud Рік тому +2

    I'm quite confident that this design has future. Like many people already said, this thing could definitely use some lube, and I'd personally go with some liquid and thick one, maybe some Krytox 205g0, like keyboard enthusiasts use for their keyboard switches, and all the surfaces that have friction should be as smooth as possible, some polishing should help. With these relatively low-effort and low-cost improvements, I hope we'll see a v2 soon!

    • @Xenotester
      @Xenotester Рік тому

      Why waste krytox for few tests of 3D printed fan ? Usual silicone oil with ptfe powder will be enough

  • @baymax2.085
    @baymax2.085 Рік тому +1

    Nice design no hub may be it would work better if there were more blades and the bearing where oiled.
    And for a reminder, you a promise to make a v2 of the water cooled air cooler with with better flow. I'm waiting.

  • @notamouse5630
    @notamouse5630 Рік тому +3

    What you need to test is a 6 or 9 pole design as that will increase peak velocity. Then add steel ball bearings and races with steel wire guides to reduce rattle and friction. Should up to double speed and airflow.

  • @ClemoVernandez
    @ClemoVernandez Рік тому +4

    An idea might be trying slightly thinner gauge wire and more winding on each core section to have a higher impedance. Might be able to increase your speeds doing that. Also with some tweaks to the bearing design then I think this could make an excellent unique fan

    • @aegislighthammer8246
      @aegislighthammer8246 Рік тому

      The problem with thinner gauge wire is increased risk of burning out the coils, so lower voltage tolerance. This might work for a low power, high torque fan? Bearing in mind I'm no electrician and my response is based on logical assumption alone.

  • @RetinaBurner
    @RetinaBurner Рік тому +8

    The big noise maker here, as is more than likely obvious, is the ball bearings. If you were to switch to a maglev design, it would be a lot quieter. Also, the fan blades could be optimized significantly which would almost certainly give you better CFM at a given RPM. Also, as mentioned elsewhere, balancing everything out would also help reduce noise and vibration. I'd be very interested to see how far you can take the design overall. Nicely done so far :)

    • @aegislighthammer8246
      @aegislighthammer8246 Рік тому +1

      My biggest concern is that the maglev may interfere with the rotators. But if they're not strong enough, they won't do their job properly. What you need is 2 maglev tracks sloped to 45 degree to cup the v-edged fan unit. Make sure this channel is perfectly smooth as catches on startup or shutdown would be disastrous. Try to keep the space as tight as possible and of course add lubricant, and send me royalties on the patent! XD

  • @francczechamp9575
    @francczechamp9575 Рік тому +1

    I'm not sure if it's possible but
    What if you use a magnetic bearing instead. Perhaps turn the motor magnets and coils into a bearing in a way?

  • @AndToTheRepublic4WhichItStands

    Now all you need to do is find a company that makes stuff for people and have them make you the inside peices out of metal like they should be and it would be a whole lot quieter. And some sort of lube on the bearings would make a huge difference too.

  • @hed420
    @hed420 Рік тому +1

    Now remove the ball bearings and add a pole in the center with a skate bearing . Should be almost completely quiet.

  • @blurrzey
    @blurrzey Рік тому +1

    don't let the aesthetic pc builders see this video they'll ask you to make them 10... every month.

  • @WiReDApe
    @WiReDApe Рік тому +1

    Close the gaps between the blades in a way that forces the air through the middle hole. Can you make a video trying to take advantage of this build and send concentrated air through the middle hole.
    How fast can you make the air go.

  • @simplybeanjelly
    @simplybeanjelly Рік тому +2

    Dude, this is one of my favorite experimental fans you've made! Great job engineering the motor and bearing system. I'm shocked at how well it worked, and it seems like the motor you made has plenty of power. I think you could really beef up the blade design and get a killer fan out of that with only minor tweaks to the design. Making it quiet would be almost impossible without molded plastics, incredibly tight tolerances, and some sort of lubrication lol, but I would love to see you make a v2 of this fan.

  • @singert66
    @singert66 Рік тому +1

    i do , in fact , also posses a RIM driven.. Thruster

  • @d13go86
    @d13go86 Рік тому +1

    @MajorHardware try Akasa vyper model fans

  • @jonathanturner2433
    @jonathanturner2433 Рік тому +1

    I would try taking out half the bearings

  • @BurchellAtTheWharf
    @BurchellAtTheWharf Рік тому +2

    15:35 just needs barring refinement

  • @liambohl
    @liambohl Рік тому +1

    This video was sponsored by earplugs

  • @georg6876
    @georg6876 Рік тому +1

    try printing it in PVDF and using Delrin bearings

  • @3sotErik
    @3sotErik 12 днів тому

    I remember this when it first came out and I thought it really was going to be the future.
    Back then I was running an 800mhz AMD Duron with the pencil mod for overclocking. My case took 13, 80mm fans. It was absolutely ridiculous for its time.

  • @mustangdbest220
    @mustangdbest220 Рік тому +1

    I love the videos and the 4K 60 quality