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Mac ATI X1900 XT Quiet Cooler Swap (Accelero X2)
Posted: 9/21/2006
Last Updated: 11/10/2006 (another user's comments)



Several Mac Pro owners that either BTO'd the ATI X1900 XT or ordered the kit from Apple have commented on increased fan noise compared to the stock (Fanless) Nvidia 7300 card, as the Mac Pro is very quiet otherwise compared to the typical G5 Tower. Here's the first Mac Pro owner notes on doing a cooler swap for lower fan noise.

" I have received my new (Mac Pro) Apple Ati X1900XT card. It rocks, soooo smooth, fast like you cannot believe. But the one drawback is the fan!! I installed the card last week and I tried to bear it, but could not. My Mac Pro is as silent as can be, and all I heard was the whizzing and whining of the fan. I did some research and found a wonderful cooler at newegg, the Arctic Cooling Accelero X2 Fluid Dynamic Bearing VGA Cooling Fan with Heatsink.
(Note: there's some user reviews (assuming PC users) there mentioning increased internal ambient temperatures since this cooler doesn't exhaust air outside the case like the original card's Cooler. One mentioned a stability problem but he must have been running the razor's edge if the few degress (C) CPU temperature rise he mentioned made it unstable. (Most other graphics cards stock coolers don't exhaust air outside the case, although the popular Arctic Silencer series replacement coolers do, but they still had a gap between the blower exhaust tube and the card's bracket/vents.) Arctic comments on the subject of hot air exhaust on their Accelero X2 page.
I asked the two Mac Pro owners that mentioned using the X2 cooler if they noticed any increased temperatures (i.e. using Hardware Monitor or Temperature monitor) or saw any problems or increased system fan speeds - see their updated comments below. BTW- I don't know about the Mac Pro but the G5 Tower's PCI zone fans were governed by power draw from the cards, not by a temperature sensor.-Mike
)
I love it (X2 Cooler), it sounds like my Nvidia 7300GT - like nothing!
For those who demand silence, go for it, for $22.99 you can't beat it.
Just save all the old parts from the original cooler and you are good to go.
One last note make sure to use artic silver 5 for even better cooling! (Arctic's Accelero X2 page notes they use "ARCTIC MX-1 thermal compound. This compound hardens during the first 200h while the performance improves steadily...")

(Here's John's reply on internal temperatures/system fan speeds with the X2 installed.)
I have been watching the card very carefully. Its a dream. The temp in the case is a little warmer, but not noticeable. The fans are not running faster, during game play at full everything I see the temperature rising about 2 - 3 degrees. The beauty of this cooler is that at full speed or idle it sounds the same. I am very happy with it and I am really surprised apple didn't have Ati produce a quieter card cooler.
I have also included a picture of the card.
(I took the card support off to install the cooler, and then put it back on.)
-John "

Accelero X2 Cooler on Mac X1900 XT
(card support extension removed in photo)
mac x1900 XT with Accelero X2 cooler

Accelero X2 Cooled Mac X1900 XT Installed
mac x1900 XT with Accelero X2 cooler

Ed S. sent a picture of the stock X1900 XT card/Cooler:

mac x1900 XT with stock cooler

Another Mac Pro/X1900 XT that installed the X2 Cooler wrote:

" I also installed an Accelero X2 yesterday. Installation was straightforward, with a couple of gotchas.

1. The x1900 is difficult to remove from the case, it is so long. A bit of tilting, rotating, and pulling is required.

2. The screws supplied with the X2 are too short for the two holes that pass through the red board extender. Fortunately, the original screws that held on the stock cooler's X frame work just fine.

It looks like the reader whose picture you posted removed the red board extender. I figured it probably served some useful purpose, so I wanted to leave it on. (It's a support for long/heavy cards typically to help prevent damage during shipping when the card is installed in a system. If the card is very heavy it also helps prevent bowing of the card and reducing stress on the connector.-Mike)

I didn't use any extra thermal paste. The supplied sticky heat pads worked fine.

The X2 is so quiet, I felt compelled to order a quieter hard disk. The hard disk is now the noisiest part of the system. :)
-Dave "

Just for the record, I wrote Dave also to ask if he's noticed any increased internal/CPU temperatures, etc. after using the X2.

" I suspect those reviewers are using PCs. (my thoughts also, but reader with a Mac Pro said those comments made him pass on the cooler initially.-Mike) The Mac Pro has such a nice design with a separate PCI compartment and fan, I don't think any heat in there would affect the other compartments. The Arctic Cooling website justifies their design here.
http://www.arctic-cooling.com/vga2.php?idx=90&data=3&disc=
As far as I can tell, the PCI compartment fan is moving the extra heat out efficiently and quietly. BTW, my x1900 was an upgrade kit also, and it came with the board extender.
-Dave
P.S. I downloaded Temperature Monitor 3.9 (available here) and gave it a whirl. Here's what I found.
    CPU temps per core (approximate)
  • Idle -- 28 degrees C
  • Under load (4 "yes > /dev/null" processes running) -- 50 degrees C
  • Playing of World of Warcraft -- 33 degrees C

WoW (World of Warcraft) causes the x1900 to generate a good bit of heat, but the CPUs are keeping their cool. "


(added 10/19/2006)
"Mike, I just did the Accelero X2 swap on my xt1900.
I had to use some screws for the back of GPU "X" bracket from Artic Cooling kit, but decided not to re-install the large frame. I may later, but wanted to try it without.

I booted (crossed fingers) and heard no ramp up of fans. Then a chime...good..then booting sequence.
Was the actual ramping up of fans the Radeon's OEM cooling I removed??? (maybe just normal fail-safe mode until the fan control software is running, and the X2's fan is quieter. Early X800 XT's did this (fans ran high/loud until OS loaded) as fan control was in the ATI Rom xtender file, later firmware updates added it to the card firmware. Assuming you're referring to the card fan and not the system fan (system fans are controlled via OS/sensors also.)-Mike) If so, wow, what a difference in noise!

I'm running Temperature Monitor and so far, the main drive is 80F and the 4 CPU cores average 75.9F. (under 76°F?? That's literally room temperature. That's at system idle right? (not when running apps, taxing the CPUs, etc.)-Mike)

I still hear a fan or two, but only after I've turned off my PC (4 feet away!).
Not as quiet as a Mini, but still, far quieter than any G5!
-Ed S. "

Nice cooler - quiet, efficient and cheap is a great combination.


(added 11/10/2006)
"Just thought I'd share my initial installation experience with the Accelero X2 on the X1900 in my Mac Pro. Just as many other owners who custom configured the X1900 in their systems, I quickly became aware of fan noise from the stock cooler of the card. I tracked down a local source here in Toronto, Canada (www.bigfootcomputers.com) for the Accelero X2 at $29 CDN.

Now I personally do not have any experience with applying thermal pads or working with thermal compound (never had to), but Arctic Cooling assures you "installation within seconds". Since this was my first time working with a VGA cooler, I decided to follow the supplied instructions very keenly. And this would be my first comment; that the instructions are a little vague, in particular for failing to include the step of applying the thermal pads onto the VRAM chips of the card. It was easy to overlook the thermal pads (with my inexperience and reliance on the instructions) with the only reference being "The protection film on each thermal pad should be peeled off before installation".

The included white plastic washers MUST be used for all 7 screw locations, even though the stock cooler did not use any. This seemed unusual for the pressure bracer (X frame) for GPU on the back of the card, since having the washers between the board and the bracer decreased the force it was intended to apply. If you do not use the washers, the holes on the Accelero X2 for the screws are not deep enough and therefor once tightened, the cooler will not remain flush with graphics board. Also, as others have mentioned, if you wish to continue to use the red plastic board extender, you will need to use 2 of 4 the original screws that held the stock cooler and the X frame. They are long enough to accommodate the plastic washers and the red board extender.

The Mac Pro is definitely quieter, and all I hear now is the whine and gargling of the hard drive. I did not record temperatures with the stock cooler vs. the Accelero X2, but the computer fans have remained as quiet as before, even with extended play hours in WoW. I'd be glad to provide long term temperature data with a particular application if would like.

My only concern comes from my trial and error. The Accelero X2 cooler comes with pre-applied thermal paste on the GPU plate, however the instructions make no comments or warnings about it. Having had to remove the X2 cooler to make adjustments and then reinstall it, the thermal paste on the cooler obviously spread out on the first application. I left the paste as distributed, and simply reinstalled the X2 cooler.

Will this be a problem for cooling? Is it recommended to reapply the paste everytime the cooler and the GPU are separated ? If so, I'm amazed the instructions made no mention of this, or that a small amount of additional paste for reapplication was not supplied. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. (I've not owned one of these to see what this looks like but if the thermal paste is still uniformly on the contact surfaces, I'd leave it alone. Normally all that is needed is a thin coat.-Mike)

Also, I'm assuming swapping VGA coolers does not affect your warranty, correct? Would a service centre care if they saw a third- party cooler in the Mac Pro ? Or would it be recommended to reinstall the stock cooler?
Thanks for the great site!
-Ken "

Thanks. If the card ever failed, Apple might balk at the replaced heatsink so I'd keep the original one around just in case. (i.e. reinstall it before sending the X1900 for warranty repair.) They don't really repair graphics cards that do fail - they're replaced and personally I'd suggest putting the stock heatsink back on before sending it in for servicing. (But odds are you will never have to do that during the warranty period at least.)


If you've done a Mac graphics card cooler swap/mod, install guide, etc. let me know the details. Thanks.

Other X1900 Graphics Card/Cooler Related Articles and Posts:

See the Video topics page, Graphics card and Coolers section for other card model related articles.





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