Hi Michael,
1/ Yes you did
2/ Yes
3/ You bet
4/ & 5/ Until now no problem but I've been doing it iteratively :
- first : without the RFX (which is known to get very hot, even in IDLE), and without the sampler's cover.
I noticed quite little heat from the PSU (less than I was expecting), so I decided to go on with testing.
As a piece of info : I got the 47 Watt PSU (I believe it's 47 W, well, anyway it's the "small" one, the factory one in fact)
- then : with the RFX, cover still opened.
Before I tried to run the sampler with its fan 100% off, I've been working for months with, say only 5-10% of its full voltage (thanks to the regulator mod), so it was rather silent. But : the Rfx was mounted, the HD was most of the time running (not in sleep mode I mean), the samplers cover was mounted and I never saw any problem.
The result of this tests makes me believe that E-mu decided to avoid any problems of hardware breakdowns (for instance PSU but more generally, any other component in the sampler, like HD) due to overheating, by installing this fan. By the way, at this time (1999 -> 2001) all hard drives (including IDE ones) were pretty (if not very) noisy so I believe they didn't really felt concerned by the noise topic. Well ... even the computers were very noisy then, and no one was complaning (except you and me, I mean
)
Now, the next step is : this week I'm waiting for adhesive heatsinks (purchased on ebay) to install on the RFX, cause I think the R-Chips and the metallic plate of the RFX gets a little too hot, even if I never went into trouble with it anyway. On my 5th picture you can notice that I removed the metallic protection for optional items on the rear. This provides a few holes. The final step is : I'll put the heatsinks on the RFX, then I'll put the samplers cover (then I pray
).
2 thoughts as little conclusion :
- I'm quite sure any hard drive or RFX needs fresh air more that the embeded PSU does
- If you decide to make tests, do things iteratively, taking your time before changing the conditions
Of course ... do it at your own risk, perhaps your PSU is much more tired than mine ... :-/
Hope it'll help anyway !
Olivier