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Date:      Sun, 8 Oct 2006 17:57:47 -0700
From:      David King <dking@ketralnis.com>
To:        freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Quiet computer
Message-ID:  <3ABF536B-F199-47B9-8B10-EF5A0644BC62@ketralnis.com>
In-Reply-To: <200610052145.54292.soralx@cydem.org>
References:  <3692C07B-CCCC-4756-9B33-6DA724481FF2@ketralnis.com> <200610041939.35376.soralx@cydem.org> <0431EB40-6AF8-49A6-9F87-0B707B1DDC94@ketralnis.com> <200610052145.54292.soralx@cydem.org>

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>>> You might wants to consider using a low-power 'brick'-type AC->DC
>>> PSU (~90W?) and a DC-DC voltage converter that plugs directly into
>>> a mainboard's power connector. This will be quite noiseless.
>> Do you have any recommendations? Ideally it would mount on the case
>> (<http://www.logicsupply.com/product_info.php/products_id/134>) like
>> the current power supply does but I'm open to other options
> something like this (random example):
> http://www.logicsupply.com/product_info.php/products_id/596

The only types of power supplies with which I'm familiar are the ones  
that typically ship with most cases, so I'm a little confused by  
this, excuse my obvious ignorance :)

What does the DC-DC converter do, if the AC-DC converter supplies DC  
power?

What would be an example of this AC-DC converter? Could it power two  
3.5" hard drives in addition to the motherboard? How does it differ  
from a regular power supply?



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