All hardware acts up. How does yours?

No, I mean people replacing their own roofs or windows, installing their own central heating, or rewiring their own house. Some people are competent to do these things and the DIY shops used to produce helpful leaflets showing how it could be done safely. Then the government decided certificates were needed to prove the job had been done properly and since only tradespeople could issue such certificates it became illegal to do these jobs without employing a tradesperson to certify it, which they'd often refuse to do unless they'd been hired for the whole job or would charge nearly as much. As for the tradespeople, just because they certify the work doesn't mean it necessarily complies. That depends on the worker's honesty.

Do you mean moonlighters or cowboys, by the way? Moonlighters are people with two jobs. Cowboys are tradespeople who cut corners and do a bad and sometimes dangerous job. Doesn't stop them paying the fee and passing an exam to qualify for issuing the certificate.
 
Then the government decided certificates were needed to prove the job had been done properly and since only tradespeople could issue such certificates it became illegal to do these jobs without employing a tradesperson to certify it, which they'd often refuse to do unless they'd been hired for the whole job or would charge nearly as much.
When I used to install CAT scanners, we did one in New York. The union caught wind of us being there and insisted on letting one of their guys do the cabling. Senior installer Barry showed the electrician the gold pins of the cable and asked him if he really wanted to be responsible if he destroyed that $10,000 gold plated connector. He decided it was better to go stand in the corner while we did the work.

As for the tradespeople, just because they certify the work doesn't mean it necessarily complies.
When I first got into the restaurant business, our layout had to have an architect's seal to get approved by the county. We found an architect who would give it a two minute look for a significantly lower price.
 
There are four fans inside my box. The bad one was driving me a little crazy so I unplugged it. I read how you can give it a drop of oil and maybe stop the noise rather than buying a new one. I'll try that one day soon but, for now, I thought I'd monitor the cpu temperature.

It's not a good test cause I'm not doing anything intensive though I do leave it on all day. Just surfing the web and watching some videos but before pulling the plug the temps ranged from 29C to 32C. After pulling, they range from ....... 29C to 32C.
 
It all depends how long you drive it hard for, what the ambient temperature is, was the case specifically designed to keep that hardware cool, etc? The CPU fan cools the CPU. A case fan cools the case, but the case only needs cooling if heat's being generated faster than it can naturally disperse for long enough for the temperature to reach a point where the electronics can't cool efficiently. My server lives in a case which came with two small fans in addition to the PSU fan and a chipset fan. The Atom CPU doesn't need a fan - it only has 8W TDP. These little fans spin fast and wear quickly, becoming noisy after a few months of continuous operation. I got fed up with replacing them and just disconnected them about a year ago. Everything still works, but then the MB's not driving a GUI so the graphics load is minimal. Mind you, I have an oversized 350W PSU in this box, and SSDs rather than HDDs, so there's less heat to start with.

If it's not getting hot, you probably don't need the fan.
 
I'm running an Ivy Bridge i7. It doesn't have a fan on it but I have a multi-fin cooling tower on it. I pulled the nvidia card for reasons I said elsewhere. iirc, this is the same temperature it was running the last time I checked who knows how long ago. The case came with three fans built in. The fourth is the fan built into the power supply which I installed. So it was just of interest to see what happens when one fan is removed.

Eventually I'll have a new graphics card. The one I have an eye on has three fans built on so I won't need anymore for that.
 
Since a month or 6, my main PC needs a heavy aquarium stone placed above the front USB ports to avoid extremely annoying case resonance of the coolant engine. I tried a lot but I can't fix it. The stone must stay forever.
 
Not a very useful discussion, in my mind. With all electronics, I expect the bathtub curve:
  1. High failure rate in infancy that rapidly drops off
  2. Flat, very low failure rate for the useful life of a system/component
  3. Increasing failure rate towards the end of design life
I am only surprised or angered by failures that happen within the flat part of the bathtub curve. And buying quality components and devices, I have rarely experienced that.
 
These issues made me switch back to Windows 11 Pro finally when my old off-lease HP Z420 workstation that I'd bought off of a respectable reconditioned finally gave up the ghost on me last fall. So after that machine bit it, I just said Screw it and sprung for the very Hp Z2 G1i workstation that I'm presently writing this post on right now.

Yes, it's running Windows 11 pro however I also ne'm fine with that because I need applications like Zoom desktop and I need a MS Office 365 capable browser, which means (Edge , Chrome or Fire Fox) and I know I could get the Zoom Firefox extension working under FreeBSD. I just got sick I constantly having family members send me documents or photos and not having an Office Suite that was compatible with MS-Office file extensions OOTB.
 
Disk drives mostly then followed by fans.

My wife’s Samsung 840 pro died after 14 years of service. Bricked DOA. I’ve only lost two SSD and both were 840 with high run times.
 
Hardware failures have nothing to do with the operating system.
I'm not saying that the failure of my former physical machine prompted me to revert to Windows. I was trying to show that my new workstation came pre-installed with a license of Windows 11 Professional and I didn't want to waste money by simply hosing a perfectly good Windows installation.

I have several SSDs and a 4TB spinner and another 2TB spinner; however, I would rather use my storage assetts for hosting my virtual machines and my moderate game libraries, in which most of my games are Windows only.
 
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