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Cooling performance with 2 fans?

D

DaveC

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

The fan has no obstructions, front or rear, in the near airflow path. It does
have an input screen, but removing this doesn't change the measured noise.

The design information I have found attributes the majority of self-generated
noise of a free-standing fan to the air turbulence caused by the motor
support struts.

The fan has these specs, according to the mfr's web site:
115v, 75Vmin; 60hz; 0.180a; 14.5w; 2650rpm; 90.0cfm; 0.22in h2o / 55.0Pa;
39dB.

I've looked around for a fan pushing that much air and quickly realized that
a quieter one probably can't be found. So I'm looking at other options.

From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)

This is where I've been getting my info from:

<http://www.nmbtech.com/engineering_101.html>

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
 
M

MassiveProng

Jan 1, 1970
0
I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".


How about age of the bearings and crud on the fan blades?
 
P

Palindrome

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

The fan has no obstructions, front or rear, in the near airflow path. It does
have an input screen, but removing this doesn't change the measured noise.

The design information I have found attributes the majority of self-generated
noise of a free-standing fan to the air turbulence caused by the motor
support struts.

The fan has these specs, according to the mfr's web site:
115v, 75Vmin; 60hz; 0.180a; 14.5w; 2650rpm; 90.0cfm; 0.22in h2o / 55.0Pa;
39dB.

I've looked around for a fan pushing that much air and quickly realized that
a quieter one probably can't be found. So I'm looking at other options.

From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)

This is where I've been getting my info from:

<http://www.nmbtech.com/engineering_101.html>

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Any chance of using ducting to move the fans to somewhere else? What I
am thinking of is the plastic wire-reinforced concertina tubing supplied
with many air conditioners/ bathroom exhaust fans/tumble driers/etc.

A short length of ducting to an acoustically damped box with a suitable
fan may be a solution.

Otherwise, if there is room in the kit, an internal heat exchanger with
an external low or zero noise radiator can be very effective. The sort
of thing used for many PCs is what I had in mind. That may elinminate
the need for an external fan on the kit. Car heater matrixes are an
excellent source of small heat exchangers/radiators.
 
D

DaveC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Excellent suggestions, Sue, as usual.
Any chance of using ducting to move the fans to somewhere else? What I
am thinking of is the plastic wire-reinforced concertina tubing supplied
with many air conditioners/ bathroom exhaust fans/tumble driers/etc.

A short length of ducting to an acoustically damped box with a suitable
fan may be a solution.

Hadn't thought of this. Definitely one possibility, since the equipment is
"planted" more or less permanently in that location on the bench.
Otherwise, if there is room in the kit, an internal heat exchanger with
an external low or zero noise radiator can be very effective. The sort
of thing used for many PCs is what I had in mind. That may elinminate
the need for an external fan on the kit. Car heater matrixes are an
excellent source of small heat exchangers/radiators.

I walked through Fry's the other day and looked briefly at PC moboards.
Plumbing! I hadn't looked closely at any since PIII days. What a surprise!

No one source of heat in this box that I could focus a heat exchanger at;
it's a huge old rack-mount HP siggen stuffed to the hilt with analog
discretes. I suppose just getting cooler air inside via plumbing of some kind
means that the air would not have to be moved around as fast as it is now.
Hmm...

Thanks!
 
P

Palindrome

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC wrote:
No one source of heat in this box that I could focus a heat exchanger at;
it's a huge old rack-mount HP siggen stuffed to the hilt with analog
discretes. I suppose just getting cooler air inside via plumbing of some kind
means that the air would not have to be moved around as fast as it is now.

Possible no need to focus that much - if you use a PC kit, just bolt the
"processor" water cooling block to a conventional finned & fanned
processor heatsink and put it in the equipment case. That will cool the
air circulating inside the box and possibly mean that you don't need to
pump in external air at all. You may want to add an over temperature
alarm/cutout as you may not notice if the cooling is working or not.

Car scrapyards are a good source - newer cars have quick release
plumbing and the interior heater and turbo inter-cooler heat exchangers
are just about the right size, YMMV.
 
D

DaveC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Possible no need to focus that much - if you use a PC kit, just bolt the
"processor" water cooling block to a conventional finned & fanned
processor heatsink and put it in the equipment case. That will cool the
air circulating inside the box and possibly mean that you don't need to
pump in external air at all.

But the external unit will need to push air, of course, to get rid of the
transferred heat. Unless I put the cooling lines through the wall, or such,
I'm back where I started from: "wossssssssh" (c:= <- hair on end emoticon

Definitely a cool (c: possibility, but I think the concertina tubing-and-box
solution looks simplest. But I will keep thinking on the heat-exchanger
solution; one of those geek things that one turns over in one's mind in the
idle moments...

Thanks,
 
M

MassiveProng

Jan 1, 1970
0
Any chance of using ducting to move the fans to somewhere else? What I
am thinking of is the plastic wire-reinforced concertina tubing supplied
with many air conditioners/ bathroom exhaust fans/tumble driers/etc.

A short length of ducting to an acoustically damped box with a suitable
fan may be a solution.

Otherwise, if there is room in the kit, an internal heat exchanger with
an external low or zero noise radiator can be very effective. The sort
of thing used for many PCs is what I had in mind. That may elinminate
the need for an external fan on the kit. Car heater matrixes are an
excellent source of small heat exchangers/radiators.


He could even switch to DC fans at that point, and use a thermally
controlled version that only spools up fast when needed.

Place the thermal monitor in the exit stream, OR on a critical
component/sink.

Good call, BTW.
 
N

Noral Stewart

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The
cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m
on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

If you put the microphone right in the airflow it is likely that the flow of
air over the microphone caused the microphone to perceive more "sound" than
actually existed. Have you ever heard a TV reporter standing in a windy
place. Even with a windscreen on the microphone these effects can easily
produce the level you observe. Special methods have been developed by the
computer industry to measure these small fans.
The fan has no obstructions, front or rear, in the near airflow path. It
does
From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower
fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)

The common solution is to use two slower fans in parallel. Each would
provide half the cfm needed, but running at the slower speed they typically
produce much less sound and also as another benefit typically use much less
electricity. Considering your space constraint, the other common option is
a fan with more agressive, more carefully designed blades that can turn more
slowly but still move the same amount of air with less noise. I am not sure
if such are available for small applications such as yours. On large
systems variable speed drives or belt drives can be used to adjust speed.
 
D

DaveC

Jan 1, 1970
0
I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at
that's *one meter*. At 1m, that'd have to be one *huge* fan to generate wind
noise over the mic...
Special methods have been developed by the
computer industry to measure these small fans.

But not the fan industry. All the specs I've seen show 1m, on-axis, as the
accepted method by fan manufacturers.
 
A

Angelo Campanella

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

By far th simplest is to slow down the RPM by whatever means is
convenient. Judging by the CFM, it's not very big. Unfortunately, the
only option is to apply a lower voltabe by means of a variac or
step-down transormer...

My approximate experience is that by halving a fan RPM, the noise
emission reduces by about 20 dB. Adding a second similar fan, the sound
increase by 3 dB for a net gain of 17 dB.

If the airflow that results from half speed is sufficient, you have a
soultion.
I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

If the room is big enough and you are far enough away, the sound level
might be that low.
The design information I have found attributes the majority of self-generated
noise of a free-standing fan to the air turbulence caused by the motor
support struts.

The vast majority of noise from such small fans is blade turbulence
noise with a low level tone at the blade passage frequency.
I've looked around for a fan pushing that much air and quickly realized that
a quieter one probably can't be found. So I'm looking at other options.

The problem stems from ecomomy and space. It's much more possible to
sell many more small fans (running at high RPM) that also will fit many
more places, than it is to sell large fans that turn slowly (thus being
quieter). So guess what's built and stocked for sale!
From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)

Find a way to operate the fan at reduced RPM.

Angelo Campanella.
 
M

MassiveProng

Jan 1, 1970
0
By far th simplest is to slow down the RPM by whatever means is
convenient. Judging by the CFM, it's not very big. Unfortunately, the
only option is to apply a lower voltabe by means of a variac or
step-down transormer...


AC fans are typically synchronous and slow very little by reduced
voltage.
 
D

DaveC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Find a way to operate the fan at reduced RPM.

Too risky, I think. This is a waveform generator and is sensitive to heat, I
suspect (haven't yet used it to the point where I need it to be really stable
for a period of time...).

I plan to use a larger fan in a remote location (3-feet away) placed in a box
and connected to the generator with concertina hose. The large fan will turn
at reduced speed pushing the same cfm.

All that remains is a simple way to calibrate my new fan's speed so it is
pushing the same cfm.

Ideas?

Thanks,
 
L

Lionel

Jan 1, 1970
0
Too risky, I think. This is a waveform generator and is sensitive to heat, I
suspect (haven't yet used it to the point where I need it to be really stable
for a period of time...).

The obvious solution is to control the fan speed with a temperature
sensing circuit of some sort, preferably designed to default to
full-speed if it fails. Something as simple as a forward biased diode,
an opamp or comparator, a trimpot & a transistor, mounted in the
hottest part of the case would be enough. Calibrate with a thermometer
& the pot. Easy.
 
A

ari

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

The fan has no obstructions, front or rear, in the near airflow path. It does
have an input screen, but removing this doesn't change the measured noise.

The design information I have found attributes the majority of self-generated
noise of a free-standing fan to the air turbulence caused by the motor
support struts.

The fan has these specs, according to the mfr's web site:
115v, 75Vmin; 60hz; 0.180a; 14.5w; 2650rpm; 90.0cfm; 0.22in h2o / 55.0Pa;
39dB.

I've looked around for a fan pushing that much air and quickly realized that
a quieter one probably can't be found. So I'm looking at other options.

From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)

This is where I've been getting my info from:

<http://www.nmbtech.com/engineering_101.html>

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
Not sure how much effort you wanna put into this, but if you wanna go
deeper than rules of thumb (lowering the fan speed or using temperature
control etc.), you might wanna take a look at
http://www.machineryacoustics.fi/LNDandfannoise.pdf (app. 1 Mb).
Hope, it explains the problem statement and issues you are dealing with.

You can skip the first half of the article since it deals with Low noise
design and machinery acoustics and put your effort on the case. To my
knowledge those are almost the only result dealing with comparison of
single and parallel fan operation in this kind of application. Please,
correct if i'm wrong.

And about two fans in series. It depends on how you do it, but basically
you should be able to degrease K. The benefit depends on what happens to
airflow velocity components (swirl?).

BTW, any comments, public or private, on the writing are welcome. But
let's not get into a dB discussion (this is for acoustics group), please:)

BR,

ari

PS To my understanding most research done by this kind of fan
manufacturers in last almost 10 years has been concentrating on motor
development.
 
N

Noral Stewart

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
that's *one meter*. At 1m, that'd have to be one *huge* fan to generate
wind
noise over the mic...

Not necessarily. It is a matter of the flow velocity. Even small fans that
do not produce much cfm can produce velocity. A velocity of 1500 ft/min or
25 ft/sec will produce about 53 dBA reading on a microphone with a 90 mm
windscreen even if the actual sound heard from the fan is much lower. If
there is no windscreen on the microphone, the indicated level will be much
higher, so even a lower velocity could produce the 53 dBA. I do not believe
small computer fans would typically produce 1500 ft/min, but if someone put
a microphone without a windscreen in the flow, I could conceive some
microphones giving 53 dBA.

But not the fan industry. All the specs I've seen show 1m, on-axis, as the
accepted method by fan manufacturers.

I do not know what fan sizes or manufacturers you are referring to. Large
ventilating fan sound is measured using reverberant rooms to establish the
sound power emitted rather than a level at a distance.

This document illustrates the use of what they call a "Maling Box" after the
inventor George Maling of IBM. The box is also sometimes called an "INCE
Plenum" as it was standardized by the Institute of Noise Control
Engineering.

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/Acoustics/collaboration/in06_110_talk.pdf
 
J

Jon Elson

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've looked around for a fan pushing that much air and quickly realized that
a quieter one probably can't be found. So I'm looking at other options.

From the information I can find I understand that using 2 fans in series
increases static pressure; in parallel, increases CFM. If use 2 slower fans
stacked together in series, will I be able to obtain the same cfm while
running at less-than full speed? It looks like static pressure won't be a
problem with 2 fans. (There is no way of adding fans in parallel without
major enclosure hacking which is not an option.)
Two fans in series will do worse than one of the same fan, except where the
static pressure is very high. Lower speed fans stall at lower static
pressure
(in general) but you indicate no major obstructions.

One way I do this and avoid enclosure hacking is to hang the replacement
fans
outboard in some manner. Tangential blowers can be very quiet and can
deliver
as much static pressure as a boxer fan. But, their shape is very different.

Jon
 
G

Guest

Jan 1, 1970
0
i like the extenal sucker arrangement using ducting, allows to place motive
fan elsewhere, even directed to a sound damping box.

perhaps even consider reverse flow of the air stream? if possible may allow
the unit itself to 'absorbe' the sound energy
within the mass of the unit. may be tricky though.

fan blades with little or no struts and obstruction always are quieter, no
turbulennce or like.

newly designed fans, the ones actually 'designed' to reduce turbulent noise
may be of help. requires u to do lotsa research on largly unavailable data
though.

consider reduced air flow, but running closer to heat margin of the unit,
tricky too. lower the room thermostat?

punch hole thru back wall, send the noise into somebody elses space!! ;-))

HP step sig gen i have sounds like a locomotive, i wish they had used
variable rate fans!

or, get new equipment!! hound the boss, wife or sponsor, pitch it that
the 'new' unit will save power, less space, last longer !!!
 
A

Angelo Campanella

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
I've got a piece of lab test equipment that's about 30 years old. The cooling
fan is very loud and I'm looking for ways to quiet it down.

I measure the fan's noise at 53dB (using A-weighted dB meter at 1m on-axis),
although the fan mfr only rates it at 39dB. I attribute the discrepancy to
"marketing reality distortion" or "wishful engineering".

"I'm glad you asked".

I've been studying and fighting fan (ALL sizes) noise for years.
The "fifth power" rule applies; fan noise increases to the fifth power
of the RPM. Personal tests show a 20 dB rise for a doubling of fan RPM.
If you add a second fan alongside to still get 90 CFM (wow; big fan for
electronics these days), then run two side by side, but at half RPM.

AC fans are difficult to slow down; variable speed drive (VSD) is done
for big building HVAC fans by fabricating lower ac frequencies. But you
can try a dropping resistor, or connecting two ac fans in series. With
DC fans (plenty out there these days, especially in the "Muffin Fan"
series), you can easily run them slow, since the permanent magnet DC
motors run exactly proportional to applied voltage.

So half rpm gives 20 dB less noise. Placing two half speeders side by
side gives 3 dB more noise; net gain is 17 dB. Not too shabby...

Good Luck

Angelo Campanella

www.campanellaacoustics.com
 
A

Angelo Campanella

Jan 1, 1970
0
DaveC said:
Too risky, I think. This is a waveform generator and is sensitive to heat,

Then you need to mount a thermistor mounted on the critical component,
either the frequency determining component (solid state oscillator
amplifier, or on the frequency determining capacitor or resistor), or
the amplitude amplifier if that is the critical parameter. This will
serve to monitor airflow.
I suspect (haven't yet used it to the point where I need it to be really stable
for a period of time...).

I plan to use a larger fan in a remote location (3-feet away) placed in a box
and connected to the generator with concertina hose.

A small personal table mounted fan with a blade diameter of 8" to 12"
may serve. A cardboard box lined with fiberglass or open cell foam may
serve as the "enclosure". A smooth walled aluminum duct will have the
least flow resistance. The duct diameter should be large, say 4", as
used for a clothes dryer exhaust.
All that remains is a simple way to calibrate my new fan's speed so it is
pushing the same cfm.

The thermistor mentioned above should do.

Angelo Campanella
 
D

daestrom

Jan 1, 1970
0
Angelo Campanella said:
Then you need to mount a thermistor mounted on the critical component,
either the frequency determining component (solid state oscillator
amplifier, or on the frequency determining capacitor or resistor), or the
amplitude amplifier if that is the critical parameter. This will serve to
monitor airflow.

This seems like a good idea for several reasons. It serves to aid in air
flow 'calibration', but it can also monitor performance over time, looking
for degradation. Hoses, fans and filters are subject to dirt that degrade
performance. A simple monitoring circuit with alarm set-points would be
ideal here.

daestrom
 
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