|
Post by hadaja on Oct 13, 2018 14:41:59 GMT -6
Probably not the best place to put this but i was also told by another Stam customer that Stam could only ship out a maximum of 20 units a day something to do with customs. That would contribute to delays. Maybe Stam could clarify ?
|
|
|
Post by donr on Oct 14, 2018 0:17:20 GMT -6
I’m going to jump in early on this and design an adjacent blank perforated faceplate with vents and a small fan. A late night, drifting-toward-unconsciousness thought. Has anyone ever used Dyson style air movement tech to cool equipment racks? That's pretty quiet, right?
|
|
|
Post by jeremygillespie on Oct 14, 2018 21:18:09 GMT -6
I’m going to jump in early on this and design an adjacent blank perforated faceplate with vents and a small fan. A late night, drifting-toward-unconsciousness thought. Has anyone ever used Dyson style air movement tech to cool equipment racks? That's pretty quiet, right? Interesting thought for sure - I don’t know what they use to move the air and I’m wondering if it would cause any odd interference or weird noise.
|
|
|
Post by matt@IAA on Oct 14, 2018 21:19:07 GMT -6
I think they use an impeller then pass it through a channel. Basically make compressed air.
|
|
|
Post by donr on Oct 14, 2018 23:08:49 GMT -6
I think they use an impeller then pass it through a channel. Basically make compressed air. Apologize for the OT, but I can envision a oblong couple rackspace Dyson style oval in the back of a rack either drawing, or blowing fresh air into hot gear. OTOH, traditional tech fans these days are pretty quiet. I've got a OWC Thunderbolt PCIe chassis in my recording space. The fan was too noisy, but I got a kit online that cut the fan speed back, now I can't hear it. Just SSD's in it. Back to Stam, I'm in line for the '76 3-version, the original. Looking forward to it, perhaps Christmas.
|
|