The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

The New Hotness

  • PolyDryer: Noctua Fan Upgrade

    The OEM fan inside the PolyDryer is annoyingly loud, even to my deflicted hearing, so I printed a Noctua NF-A4x10 fan adapter and installed a much quieter fan:

    PolyDryer - Noctua fan installed
    PolyDryer – Noctua fan installed

    The adapter is upside-down from the suggested orientation, I didn’t bother screwing it to the fan because it has sleeves fitting into the fan screw holes, the slot holds everything together, the vivid green EVA foam sheet sits atop a craft adhesive sheet (both cut with scissors!) ensuring they don’t part company, and it works just fine.

    Of course, the OEM fan has a three-wire cable and the Noctua has a four-wire cable:

    PolyDryer - OEM vs Noctua fan cables
    PolyDryer – OEM vs Noctua fan cables

    Although you can’t quite make it out on the white plastic, both connectors have their Pin 1 marks adjacent to each other. I oriented them like that to put the pin release latches on top; a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds.

    Fortunately, Noctua documents their pinout, a bit of probing verified the OEM fan pinout (which does not match the Noctua 3-wire pinout), and the Basement Warehouse Wing emitted an assortment of matching JST XHP connectors. Chop off the black connector and rewire it in a 3-pin XHP connector:

    • Pin 1 = OEM Red → Noctua Yellow = +24 V
    • Pin 2 = OEM Yellow → Noctua Green = Tachometer
    • Pin 3 = OEM Black → Noctua Black = Ground / Common
    • unused = Noctua Blue = PWM Speed Control

    Which is barely visible plugged into the control PCB on the left:

    PolyDryer - Noctua fan wiring
    PolyDryer – Noctua fan wiring

    The brown thermocouple wire in the upper right didn’t start out in the notch intended to pass it out of the air flow downwind of the heater:

    PolyDryer - crunched thermocouple wire
    PolyDryer – crunched thermocouple wire

    The wire is exceedingly stiff and requires some persuasion, but it will eventually stay in that slot.

    One of the PolyDryer modifications (which I can no longer find) suggested improving the vent openings, because the default slats block more than half of the surface area:

    PolyDryer - molded vent slats
    PolyDryer – molded vent slats

    I chopped out all but three of the slats and stuffed an arch of aluminum window screen into each recess:

    PolyDryer - vent screens installed
    PolyDryer – vent screens installed

    Admittedly, it looks a bit raggedy:

    PolyDryer - vent screen - detail
    PolyDryer – vent screen – detail

    As far as I can tell without actually measuring anything, the air flow has increased.

    Now, to see how whether all that makes any difference.