ติดตั้ง Steam
เข้าสู่ระบบ
|
ภาษา
简体中文 (จีนตัวย่อ)
繁體中文 (จีนตัวเต็ม)
日本語 (ญี่ปุ่น)
한국어 (เกาหลี)
български (บัลแกเรีย)
Čeština (เช็ก)
Dansk (เดนมาร์ก)
Deutsch (เยอรมัน)
English (อังกฤษ)
Español - España (สเปน)
Español - Latinoamérica (สเปน - ลาตินอเมริกา)
Ελληνικά (กรีก)
Français (ฝรั่งเศส)
Italiano (อิตาลี)
Bahasa Indonesia (อินโดนีเซีย)
Magyar (ฮังการี)
Nederlands (ดัตช์)
Norsk (นอร์เวย์)
Polski (โปแลนด์)
Português (โปรตุเกส - โปรตุเกส)
Português - Brasil (โปรตุเกส - บราซิล)
Română (โรมาเนีย)
Русский (รัสเซีย)
Suomi (ฟินแลนด์)
Svenska (สวีเดน)
Türkçe (ตุรกี)
Tiếng Việt (เวียดนาม)
Українська (ยูเครน)
รายงานปัญหาเกี่ยวกับการแปลภาษา
With pumps, slowest isn't always the quietest.
Pump and fans will sound different. So identifying the noise as either fan or pump shouldn't be hard. Leave the side off the case and turn system on. Roll a piece of paper into a cone and put the smaller end to your ear and the bigger end near the pump or fans.
With pump on max speed and fans on lowest listen to the pump above the CPU. Is that the noise? If so its the pump.
With the pump on low raise fans to max. Listen to the fans is the noise coming from the fans? If so it's fan related.
If it's fan related identify if it's just one or all. Repeat steps above listening to each fan.
EDIT:
Check a cable isn't in the way of the fan blades and being hit by them.
good mobos have a pump header that can deliver more current to the pump
if the kit came with a molex/sata power adapter, use that on the pump
The highest point of the AIO loop should be the radiator so any air collects there instead
If at all possible, try to mount the radiator horizontally on the top end of your case (tubes pointing down). If you can't do that, try to mount at the front of the case with the tubes at the bottom.
If you can't do either of these, you can mount at the front with the tubes on the top, but really try to get the tubes to be higher than the pump as much as possible
I only have space to front mount it so this'll have to do. Big Thanks!