How to silence your d8b's PSU
Posted: Mon Jul 27, 2015 12:49 am
Hy guys,
I recently got my d8b from under the mothballs after 5 years of inactivity. I just had to reseat the ribbon connectors, install a new battery and it was ready to go.
In the old studio the PSU was tucked away in a cupboard, this helped with the noise. In my new place however this was hard to do. Mixing with the noisy beast next to me was just impossible, so how to tame the beast.
I opened the PSU and identified 3 noisy parts.
The CPU fan
The PSU fan
The HDD
I first replaced the 2 fans by these 2 models:
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/871058/NoiseBlocker-b-x-h-x-d-80-x-80-x-25-mm
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/1177187/NoiseBlocker-BlackSilent-XS1-b-x-h-x-d-50-x-50-x-10-mm
I had to mod the electrical connectors to the fans and had a little trouble with the screws that connect the fan to the CPU heatsink, but it took me less than 45' to change the fans.
The fans are nearly audible, great. That's when I discovered that the biggest boise maker is the HDD and not the 2 fans.
After reading up on the database on this site, I decided to change the HDD to a CF card.
I first ordered this CF IDE:
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/974515/CompactFlash-drive-IDESATA
This is a CF reader and can't be used as a boot master
I succeeded on the second try:
http://www.bol.com/nl/p/startech-com-cf-card-reader-to-ide-adapter/9200000014096684/
It took me longer to open up the case than to install it.
I did a free OS install and it booted on the first try. Completely silent PSU, OK not completely silent but the 2 fans make less noise than my Mac Pro on idle, good enough for me.
Installing the software was actually the hardest part. First getting the software on floppy disks. A USB floppy drive refused to write the bootable disks. I could format the disks as FAT, but when I tried to reformat them for the d8b OS, no go. I had to go find an old laptop with a floppy drive, running Windows 2000, success on the first go. Was it the OS (windows 2000 vs Windows 7) or the USB disk drive, no idea... Once installed I had to reactivate the V5 software. This isn't possible anymore apparently. I had to reinstall the old HDD, look up the activation code (I forgot how I did this, but I found the procedure somewhere on the forum) and then reinstall the CF.
I hope this information is useful to somebody.
And after all this work I have decided to sell my d8b in favour of an analogue console. So if someone is interested in a fully stocked d8b, with a silent PSU, there's one for sale in Belgium
regards,
Philippe
I recently got my d8b from under the mothballs after 5 years of inactivity. I just had to reseat the ribbon connectors, install a new battery and it was ready to go.
In the old studio the PSU was tucked away in a cupboard, this helped with the noise. In my new place however this was hard to do. Mixing with the noisy beast next to me was just impossible, so how to tame the beast.
I opened the PSU and identified 3 noisy parts.
The CPU fan
The PSU fan
The HDD
I first replaced the 2 fans by these 2 models:
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/871058/NoiseBlocker-b-x-h-x-d-80-x-80-x-25-mm
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/1177187/NoiseBlocker-BlackSilent-XS1-b-x-h-x-d-50-x-50-x-10-mm
I had to mod the electrical connectors to the fans and had a little trouble with the screws that connect the fan to the CPU heatsink, but it took me less than 45' to change the fans.
The fans are nearly audible, great. That's when I discovered that the biggest boise maker is the HDD and not the 2 fans.
After reading up on the database on this site, I decided to change the HDD to a CF card.
I first ordered this CF IDE:
http://www.conrad.be/ce/nl/product/974515/CompactFlash-drive-IDESATA
This is a CF reader and can't be used as a boot master
I succeeded on the second try:
http://www.bol.com/nl/p/startech-com-cf-card-reader-to-ide-adapter/9200000014096684/
It took me longer to open up the case than to install it.
I did a free OS install and it booted on the first try. Completely silent PSU, OK not completely silent but the 2 fans make less noise than my Mac Pro on idle, good enough for me.
Installing the software was actually the hardest part. First getting the software on floppy disks. A USB floppy drive refused to write the bootable disks. I could format the disks as FAT, but when I tried to reformat them for the d8b OS, no go. I had to go find an old laptop with a floppy drive, running Windows 2000, success on the first go. Was it the OS (windows 2000 vs Windows 7) or the USB disk drive, no idea... Once installed I had to reactivate the V5 software. This isn't possible anymore apparently. I had to reinstall the old HDD, look up the activation code (I forgot how I did this, but I found the procedure somewhere on the forum) and then reinstall the CF.
I hope this information is useful to somebody.
And after all this work I have decided to sell my d8b in favour of an analogue console. So if someone is interested in a fully stocked d8b, with a silent PSU, there's one for sale in Belgium
regards,
Philippe