All Things Microsoft > Microsoft Hardware
Replacing Fan for GeForce4 Ti 4600
bedouin:
The fan on my GeForce4 Ti 4600 was making some pretty obnoxious noises, so I decided to replace the old one with this new one. It's a temporary solution until the exact fan arrives from the reseller in the first URL.
Since the original was an awkward size, I couldn't use the pins to fasten the new fan to the card. Instead, I used some adhesive and applied thermal paste. Does anyone see any potential problems with this? I'm totally oblivious to proper cooling techniques and such, since I quit using PCs right around the time a dozen fans and constant temperature monitoring became normal. Actually, since the new fan is much quieter I might decide to leave it even after the replacement arrives.
Annorax:
I don't see how that could cause a problem...
Aaron Ni:
It should hold fine, but if you do experience trouble you could always get some extremely thin sheet metal and using heavy scissors trim a piece that has two prongs on each end, you could then bend this and use this bracket to adapt the screw holes to the mounting.
Think of it this way, if computer fans can survive being a combustion chamber fan then it'll handle being bodged onto a mounting. :)
bedouin:
Actually the fan fell off yesterday, so I just put some oil in the old fan and reattached it. Meanwhile, I ordered two fans from the URL above, which should last me until I finally decommission this computer in a few years.
Fan noise has never bothered me much; replacing them is an entirely different story. Especially when their proprietary.
mobrien_12:
I was doing some research on replacing fans that had no mounting clips. One method said to put a conservative amount of heat sink compound right in the middle of the chip (enough so that it won't spread to the corners of the chip when pressed together), and a couple of tiny drops of superglue on two opposing corners.
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