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- From: ghica@fig.citib.com (Renato Ghica)
- Subject: Re: What is the best working temperature for workstations?
- Message-ID: <BxM6vq.7MD@fig.citib.com>
- Originator: ghica@duck
- Sender: news@fig.citib.com
- Organization: Citibank IBISM
- References: <1992Nov11.042204.22519@ccsun7.csie.nctu.edu.tw> <1dq6efINN92p@almaak.usc.edu> <1992Nov11.093151.29752@wsdnws.waseda.ac.jp>
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1992 17:50:13 GMT
- Lines: 24
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- In article <1992Nov11.093151.29752@wsdnws.waseda.ac.jp>, ytsuji@cfi.waseda.ac.jp ("Y.Tsuji") writes:
- |>
- |> The best temperature for workstations,..., well, below 50C absolutely,
- |> but below 35 degrees Centigrade is the manufacturers recommendation. There-
- |> fore insert a thermometer that records the maximum temperature inside the
- |> chassis and see how the environment affects it. I always wonder why
- |> people don't feed cold air into computer devices rather than cool the
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- |> room. I usually put that kind of thermometer on the hottest chip whenever
- |> I think of getting rid of a fan.
- |>
- |> Dr Tsuji
- |> --
- |>
- |> ytsuji@cfi.waseda.ac.jp
-
-
- Hmm. Maybe because the resulting condensation would cause a short-circuit?
- --
-
- "I am a brain, Watson."
- "These views are my own. / Mail me or Flame me"
- Copyright (c) 1992 Renato Ghica / ghica@fig.citib.com
-