Unfortunately, if anything, putting a higher wattage power supply will increase the temp, as there's more juice for your system to draw on. The best solutions are to:
1. Increase the fans in your Tower.
2. Add a Water Cooling system which plugs directly to your
CPU.
3. Have a larger Tower, which will allow more air flow.
4. Add more coolant paste on to your CPU.
5. Stop running as many background services so you
system won't work as hard.
6. Buy a better system that can handle the workload easier.
These are the most direct methods to decreasing temps in your Tower. Hope this helps.
2007-06-11 08:48:01
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answer #1
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answered by jazzpiano420 2
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All a higher wattage power supply will do is enable you to add more stuff. It will not reduce the current draw from the mains, but will only increase it slightly. Certainly not as much as is implied above though.
If your present PSU is coping then everything should be fine. If you are worried about the temperature inside your case, install another fan, make sure there is no dust blocking the air vents and make sure cables go around cards and not over them to create a clear air-flow path.
2007-06-11 11:02:24
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answer #2
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answered by Steven 4
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One thing that you may want to do every few weeks or so is open up your tower and use a soft (very soft) brush, a compressed-air can (they sell them at Wal-Mart for about $5 or so) or something else that uses cool air to clean out your tower. This has always helped my system stay alive and running smoothe. You have to do it very carefully, though. And it's best to do it in a static-free environment, as a static shock can screw something up.
Another thing I like to do is keep my tower in an area where air can flow on the top and both sides of it. This helps regulate the temperature and keep it from cooking itself. I've seen plenty of systems go under because they've had one side and the back up against a wall, or as close as they can get it, and end up overheating them. Keep the tower as exposed to cool air-flow as you can.
The answers above mine, a location with good air-flow, and a cleaning every once in a while should help keep your computer tower from becoming your next oven.
2007-06-11 09:19:05
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answer #3
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answered by Joseph B. 1
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The higher the wattage, the more electric current, the higher the temp. If you were to increase the wattage you would have to compensate equally to help regulate the temp.
2007-06-11 08:52:37
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answer #4
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answered by Belgariad 6
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switching to a beefier power grant will oftentimes purely regulate the temperature of the flexibility grant itself and hardly the climate around it. although, based if this new power grant has a geared up-in exhaust fan, that would help in reducing inner temperatures with the aid of extracting the geared up up warm air out of the case. That stated, don't have self belief it once you examine that larger rated power ingredients equals extra warmth. it is not genuine. as we talk's power ingredients purely grant the flexibility it incredibly is asked of them (assuming it could take care of it). if your equipment purely desires 250 watts to run, no count how enormous a power grant you put in there, that is purely going to attraction to 250 watts. what's plenty extra probable inflicting your interest to freeze is in all probability the prevailing power grant would be unable to grant consistent voltage to your equipment components below heavy load (gaming) and that's inflicting the equipment instability, not inevitably the warmth.
2016-11-10 03:16:29
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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This site will help ya with cooling your PC down
http://www.coolerguys.com/
good luck
2007-06-11 08:51:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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