HUGE SCREENS TESTED–FROM £165! From 22” to 28”, these monsters have all your pixels…
ISSUE 218 OCT 2008
PERFORMANCE GEAR & GAMING
ESSENTIAL TECH SKILLS!
ISSUE 218 YOU CAN READ MINDS?
YOU CAN READ MINDS?
ULTIMATE MOBO GUIDE
Explained! Voltages,bus speeds, sockets, phase power, capacitors & more
The final showdown! AMD versus NVidia Definitive Crossfire vs SLI verdict! Plus overclocked 4870 and 280GTX tested THERE’S MORE… WWW.PCFORMAT.CO.UK
“IS THIS REALLY THE PINNACLE VIA’s Atom killer revealed OF HUMAN ACHIEVEMENT? Make your own laptop cooler YOU’RE DAMN RIGHT IT IS! ” Titan Quest
Set up home video streaming in 5 mins!
Top guide Issue 218 Oct 2008 £4.99 Outside UK & ROI £6.49
OBLIVION: AWESOME STALKER CLEAR SKY HACKS AND MODS EXCLUSIVE REVIEW!
PCF218.cover Sec1:3
7/8/08 18:57:07
Make a laptop cooling stand
1
Make this!
Aching wrists? RSI fingers? It’s time to make your own laptop stand with an integrated cooler aptops might have been designed with portability and long battery life in mind, but they weren’t designed for comfort. Use a laptop on your coffee table for more than five minutes and you’re transformed into a warped and twisted, hunchbacked visage of a human being, proclaiming thanks that she did, indeed, give us water and the internets. What we need is something that raises and angles your fine laptop into a more human-friendly angle. And while we do thank the clever clogs for pointing out a book shoved under the back of the laptop would do just that, it’s hardly what we’d call an elegant solution as we try and raise ourselves above the level of tramp. As it happens it’s easy enough to grab an acrylic sheet and bend the two ends to produce an effective custom laptop stand. You just need to vary the height of the back-end to adjust the angle. If you’re running a performance laptop then it’s easy to add cooling, via an extra case fan powered off a USB port. An A3-sized acrylic sheet should be fine for most laptops enough. We’ve opted for a 3mm thick sheet that costs less than £3, but for laptops over 3kg, use a sheet 4mm thick. ¤ Neil Mohr
L
4
64
PCF218.make 64
What you will need ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤
A3 acrylic sheet Case fan USB cable Protective gloves Hot-air paint stripper Soldering kit Clamps Workbench Wire wool
2
3
5
October 2008
6/8/08 19:41:02
Make a laptop cooling stand
6 7
“Make a stand that angles your fine laptop into a more human-friendly angle” 9 8
10
How to make a laptop stand (1) At its heart this make is superbly easy, but due to the hotair gun, we’d recommend a workbench. (2) Make sure you get a decent-sized acrylic sheet, we’ll need about 7 to 10cm for the rear fold and 3 to 5cm for the front fold then 20 to 30cm for the main section. As it turns out an A3 sheet is about right and widely available on eBay. (3) Measure and clamp the sheet in place and peel any protective plastic well out of the way. Pop on protective gloves and use the heat gun on a ‘cool’ 300°C setting. Evenly heat the sheet where you want the fold. This will take a good few minutes. (4) Once you’ve made the back fold. Do the same for the front. We bent this completely back on itself to make a comfortable fold if we rest it on our legs. (5) That could be it right there, but we’re going to add extra cooling. Flip the laptop over and mark out where the cooling vents are, drill/cut slowly otherwise you’ll crack the plastic. (6) Take an existing USB cable and strip a suitable length of cable. (7) Choose a low-power fan as it’ll only be supplied with 5v rather than the required 12v. Solder the black and red connections together. (8) To make a neat finish, counter sink screw holes in the plastic, so the fan screws will be flush. (9) Our final touch is to add a strip of silicon rubber or you could use rubber pads to stop the laptop from slipping. (10) Done! October 2008
PCF218.make 65
65
6/8/08 19:41:13