The TPS puts out information that is used together with the information from the engine load. If you have never installed a TPS sensor before, here a few tips to help you install one quickly and easily. Unscrew the four Phillips-head screws to remove the air filter.
The clamp screw needs to be loosened so that the rubber duct for the lid can be slid off. There will be another clamp that needs to be loosened so you can remove the duct from the throttle body. The connector needs to be unplugged. If there is an electrical connector equipped, it should be attached at the temperature sensor.
Lay the flexible duct aside. The idle air control motor has connectors and those need to be removed. The throttle position sensor can be located on the firewall portion of the throttle body. Using needle nose pliers, compress the hose clamps. Next you will have to remove the two hoses from the coolant bypass. Remove all the nuts and bolts and disconnect all the cables and lay them aside. Take the throttle body off the intake manifold. Now that the throttle body is out put it on the workbench.
Remove the torx screws. Now you can take the throttle position sensor out. The rear of the case has unfiltered ventilation holes in the above the IO and the IO guards whatever they called, usually i seal all of them with electric type or acoustic material so no unfiltered air may get sucked in, but in such setup with 4 intakes the logic dictates that it will create enough pressure so nothing will be sucked in from these holes only come out? MegaFalloutFan , Jan 22, GroinShooter , Jan 22, So that looks like something I want to do.
Hi there As above you need to test all possible fan configurations When I run AIO or air cooler, usually I set front and bottom fans as intakes and AIO fans I run as exhaust and exhaust fan I tried like intake or as exhaust, there I saw zero difference in temperatures With air cooler or NH-D15 best setup has been front as intake and bottom as intake, no top intake or exhaust fans, adding extra top fans has created only noise and didn't improved cooling Raising case by cm helped me with better airflow and better temperatures Just Fractal Design R6 doesn't come with best fans, wish they used better fans there Hope this helps Thanks, Jura.
I have 2 intakes in front of R5 and 1 exhaust in back of case, changing the setup never changes temps i was seeing, atlest not in cpu temps.
GPU temps never saw much diffrence either. My uncles PC has 2 front intakes and 2 top exhaust and 1 back exhaust. He dont use EVGA cards though so defualt fan curves on gigabye might be diffrent then EVGA, curves and there for fan run faster which you cant really tell cause his system is already loud from case fans. MegaFalloutFan , Jan 24, I just bought the R6 and am trying out different fan configurations.
And about the bottom fan being a dust trao, I'd say it's more about how often the apartment is vacuumed and how often the computer is dusted. I would not recommend using the PCIe riser and the mounted slot since it will add a good 15 degrees to your GPU temps depending on the card. The glass does trap heat and since the heatpipes will heat up the glass, the fans will do nothing but suck up warm air, so that's a bad idea.
Sure, there was a difference in temps to when I mounted it at the front but it wasn't that big. I don't think the HDDs will mind the extra heat.
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