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My room was so cold before and after I added a PC, it became much much warmer, is PC really like a huge heater?

2006-09-08 14:05:40 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

9 answers

YES your computer is a huge heater, the monitor is hot and the CPU alone has a huge heatsink on it with a fan to blow air out the back of your case. The power supply has huge heatsinks with 3 transistors on each that get very hot. If you remove the huge heatsink on your CPU it will burn up in less than 15 seconds.
If you remove the fans in your power supply, it will destroy itself. If you block all the holes in your monitor panels, it will overheat and die. If you think about it, electricity comes IN the room, -- hundreds of watts. It does not leave the room = tons of heat generated - it does not matter if you bring in electricity and have a big red heating element generating heat, or if you bring in electricity, and have the CPU, the power supplies, the chips, monitor etc. generating heat - the result is the same --- power in = heat out...

2006-09-08 14:17:56 · answer #1 · answered by outgoingtraffic 2 · 0 0

I fairly were wondering about this a lot too. I see that there are a large kind of misconceptions right here: a million. conserving the pc at a more desirable temperature does generate slightly extra warmth because the electric powered resistance will boost with warmth, even though it will be stupid to relax the pc a lot less with the intention to get extra warmth out of it, purchase an electric powered heater, and to boot the version does no longer be so large. for instance: in case you change down the fan speed you've 60 levels on the heatsink, yet a decrease air-bypass which means that you have become a lot less volume of air heated, yet to a more desirable temperature. with regards to performance: performance is distinctly a lot continuously close to to 100%, for sure for electric powered heating isn't very solid, for instance an air conditioner can in many cases benefit round three hundred% performance. 3. although what in case you ought to do some thing utilising the pc that you would in any case do, or some thing that ought to generate funds for you? for instance: Use folding@homestead or seti@homestead, likely overclock your present day means effectual processor with the intention to get extra appropriate performance and extra warmth. for sure, seti@homestead and folding@homestead would earnings the medical community, no longer you, so that you're saying what about mining bitcoins? so a techniques as i recognize that has grow to be too aggressive with many purpose equipped electronics having a lot extra appropriate performance. 4. so as take care of to warmth a room the pc/s would should be on 24 hours an afternoon with the intention to make a huge difference. So then quite, the question is do you adult men have some thing that's nicely worth processing, so as that the processing pays for the means, and the nice and cozy temperature will be a loose byproduct?

2016-11-06 22:36:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes. The newer they are, the more power they draw (in general). The faster chips require more power, and amny high-end graphics cards also take a lot of juice.

A computer turns almost all of that electricity into heat. (By comparison, an incandescent light bulb turns 90% of it in to heat and 10% in to light)

And your system can easily draw over 200 watts when its in use. That all gets turned in to heat.

Its a big problem for some companies because all of their servers are heating up their computer rooms beyond the AC's capacity.

2006-09-08 14:19:34 · answer #3 · answered by Jim S 5 · 0 0

Your CPU heats up.

Your fan blows the heat out of the computer.

Your door is closed, or circulation in your room is low.

Hence, the room gets warmer. It acts like a small heater.

:o)

2006-09-08 14:15:51 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It depends on how much your computer runs and how you leave it running.

Depending on how fast the processing system and how good the cooling system, your room can feel a high temperature difference. Open a window or make your computer run slower, or get a better cooling system for your computer [which would still mean heat to the room overall though]. To remove the heat you either transfer it to another location IE open your door or window and blow it out with a fan.

2006-09-08 14:12:14 · answer #5 · answered by Robin C 4 · 0 0

It's about as hot as 3 75 watt bulbs

2006-09-08 14:12:19 · answer #6 · answered by Bill 6 · 0 0

yep. They can produce a lot of heat. That's why so many people have problems with playing games on PC's these days (because they overheat so easily.)

2006-09-08 14:12:34 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If your computer is giving off more heat than a normal appliance, IE : yout television, please unplug your computer and take it to a technichian, before it causes a fire and i do hope if you don't take this advice you do have working SMOKE ALARMS nearby

2006-09-08 14:13:21 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it might be a fire hazard mine doesnt do that.

2006-09-08 14:07:55 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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