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June 5th, 2019 21:00

XPS 8930 SE, Exhaust Fan and PSU Upgrade

XPS 8930 Tower Special Edition

  • Motherboard Chipset Intel Kaby Point Z370, Intel Coffee Lake-S
  • 9th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-9900K 8-Core Processor (16M Cache, up to 5.0 GHz)
  • 64GB, DDR4, 2666MHz Samsung
  • 2TB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD Toshiba
  • nVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 1080 8GB GDDR5X: 3x DisplayPort 1.3 (1.4 Ready), HDMI 2.0, Dual Link DVI-D
  • 11ac + Bluetooth 4.2, Dual Band 2.4&5 GHz, 1x1
  • Windows 10 Pro 64bit English
  • Microsoft® Office 2019 Professional
  • 2 x Dell UltraSharp U2717D 27” InfinityEdge QHD Monitors

I will provide a lot of photos for beginners like myself (click photos to embiggen).

Acknowledgement goes to HanoverB for much information and assistance during this project.

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XPS 8930 SE with which most will be familiar; air flow starved small form case; swing-out PSU

My unit has 2TB SSD only; no spinners, so all the HDD cages are removed.

 

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My CPU came with the "upgraded" heatsink/blower fan. Unfortunately, the wizards at Dell "downgraded" the top exhaust fan from 120mm to 92mm. The mission was to swap the 92mm top exhaust for for 120mm fan. Initial research revealed that the CPU power connector from the PSU was inconveniently located under the heatsink. So I decided to also upgrade the PSU while I had the heatsink removed and access to the CPU power connector.

 

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Gain access to the internal organs by removing, in this order; side cover -> optical drive -> front bezel -> top cover (see service manual).

 

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Make sure you have a clean, suitable work area with space for tools and no clutter.

 

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Since I was changing out the PSU I took a lot of photos so I would have a record of which connection plugged in where and cable routing. I recommend you do the same if you are a noob like me, but in the end, it was actually very easy.

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Remove the graphics card.

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The CPU fan header is also inconveniently located under the heatsink, so when you remove the blower fan the cable will still be connected. Set it aside gently on the mobo until the heatsink is removed and you can access the fan header connection.IMG_3712.JPG

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Once the heatsink is removed you can see the two fan headers and the CPU power connector.

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Clean the thermal paste from the CPU and disconnect the blower fan from the CPU fan header.

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One screw to easily remove the top exhaust fan bracket and fan.

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Familiarize yourself with the location of the connections. Fortunately, they are well labeled.

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This system board power connector can be stubborn, so be very careful. It has a release clip on the back. This would ONLY need to be removed if you are upgrading the PSU.

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I went with a Seasonic FOCUS 850 watt fully modular PSU. I was originally going to upgrade the OEM 460 watt PSU to 650 watt, but I followed the recommendation of HanoverB and got the 850 watt PSU and I am grateful for that, for reasons that will become more clear in a subsequent thread. You will also need to purchase separately a 6-Pin Slimline SATA 15-Pin SATA Power Cable to re-connect the optical drive to the PSU.

6-Pin Slimline SATA 15-Pin SATA Power Cable

 

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The Seasonic FOCUS PSU is a perfect fit and a very simple swap (4 screws).

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For the top exhaust fan I went with the recommended 120mm Noctua 3-pin fan that will spin at a quiet 1,200 rpm. You will need to acquire the Aurora R5 120mm top exhaust fan bracket, which is available on the big auction site.

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This photo shows the substantial difference between a 92mm fan and a 120mm fan. There is approximately 70% more area with the 120mm fan.

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Slide the new bracket and fan in place and tighten the screw. Note in this photo that I have installed the new CPU modular power cable from the Seasonic PSU. These cables have a lot more insulation and protection than the OEM wires. The wires coming out of the CPU power connector must be bent at 90 degrees and tucked under the fan to provide clearance for the heatsink when it is re-installed. The top exhaust fan power cable must also be bent over and tucked under the fan.

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Since the CPU fan header is underneath the heatsink, after you have applied thermal paste to the CPU, you will need to thread the blower fan cable through the heatsink and plug it into the CPU fan header first, and then carefully install the heatsink.

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Route the blower fan power cable so it is not pinched and install the blower fan.

 

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Now we are looking to install two front case fans.

 

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Carefully install the system board power cable and drape it and the CPU power cable towards the back of the case and out of the way.

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For the front intake fans, again, Noctua 120mm 3-pin 1,200 rpm fans. The Aurora R5 front cooling case fan bracket (7M0F5) can also be acquired on the big auction site and makes installation of the lower front fan very easy.

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I experimented with several different types of gasket/weather strip material for mounting the top front fan and found this type to work best.

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Cut the weather strip and make a frame by pressing the glue side against the case.

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Wedge the fan into the weather strip frame making sure it is tight against the front case mesh, and add the final piece as shown to hold the fan in place. Note the position of the fan power cable.

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The bottom front fan simply snaps into place in the XPS 8930 case with the Aurora R5 bracket. Again, note the position of the power cable.

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Reinstall the graphics card.

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Start connecting the modular cables from the PSU. Since the modular cables need to be "universal fit" and the XPS 8930 is a small form case, you will end up with a lot of extra cable length, so cable management is imperative.

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Add cables slowly and neatly secure them with zip ties, regularly checking clearance and that there is no binding as the PSU swing-out mechanism opens and closes.

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I chose to power the two front fans off the PSU with an SATA fan splitter cable.

 

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For front fans I choses these 120mm ModRight filters. This design includes added relief due to the two-tiered construction and the concave nature of the screen material. I tried to use magnetic tape for mounting the filters, but it did not hold well enough, so I ended up using double-sided tape across the corners, as shown.

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I left some magnetic tape strips in the indented areas to smooth the surface for the double sided tape. Areas that were vented to the inside of the case were sealed off with Gorilla tape so that the fans are drawing air from outside the case. The top cover has also been reinstalled in this photo.

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The filters are installed with the double-sided tape. The significance of the aforementioned "relief" can be seen here as the lower filter screen clears the case protrusion such that no cutting is required.

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The inserts on the front bezel need to be cut with a Dremel cutting wheel.

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The front bezel is reinstalled.

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The optical drive is reinstalled and connected to power using the previously mentioned 6-Pin Slimline SATA 15-Pin SATA Power Cable.

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Re-connect your peripherals and enjoy.

 

Added link to follow-up thread

XPS 8930 SE - CPU & GPU Water Cooling; External Rad

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 10th, 2020 09:00

@mfurr   Where are you plugging the bottom fan in?

You have multiple options;

You can us a fan splitter adapter, and plug all 3 fans into the TOP FAN header.

As an example  3-way fan splitter cable 

You can power directly from the PSU SATA cable with a SATA to 2 fan adapter.

As an example  SATA to 2 fan adapter 

You could also pick up PSU power as above but with a molex to 2 fan adapter.

As an example  molex to 2 fan adapter 

 

5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

June 10th, 2020 10:00

@mfurr 

Pay attention to the orientation of you fan power cables when installing the front fans to avoid problems later. Note the position of the fan power wires in this photo; bringing the wires to 'front center' of the chassis. (click photo to embiggen)

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2.2K Posts

June 10th, 2020 11:00

@Anonymous :

That red color SATA cable for the ODD seems to be not plugged in correctly to the motherboard. Are you able to watch your DVDs on your pseudo ?

29 Posts

January 22nd, 2021 13:00

I went the easy way.  I added a large fan on the top sucking air.  , I had a spare 12v 1amp power supply with a molex plug.  

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5 Practitioner

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274.2K Posts

January 22nd, 2021 23:00

@lotust251    I added a large fan on the top sucking air. , I had a spare 12v 1amp power supply with a molex plug.

Nice . . . its like push/pull with no radiator. Certainly additional air is exhausted from the case. Of course, you could have connected to TOP_FAN header with a Y-splitter cable.

1 Message

October 31st, 2022 12:00

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 This guide was extremely useful. I was able to build my system similarly to this. Howevrr, I am using the noctua NH-L12 Ghost S1. I found it clears the PSU bracket and the RAM slots just enough. Just be sure to use low-profile RAM sticks. I also decided not to put a 2nd fan in the front to place another storage drive there.

 

Specs:

i7-7700

64gb of OLOy RAM @ 2667mhz (limited by bios)

Evga 3060

1tb Samsung 870 QVO (boot drive)

2tb Samsung 870 QVO 

 

 

4 Operator

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2.1K Posts

October 31st, 2022 13:00

Nice work!

1 Message

January 24th, 2023 09:00

I have a similar system to yours. And I see you were able to installed Noctua NH-L12 Ghost S1 in your XPS 8930, how very interesting! According to Noctua this cooler is not supposed to work with XPS 8920/8930 (??). How did you do it? Did you just use the parts (bracket and backplate etc) that come with NH-L12 Ghost S1, or did you have to do something else to make things worked? Did you need to remove the motherboard in order to attach Noctua's backplate from behind, or were you able to install the mounting bracket from the front (without removing motherboard)? And how does it all work out for you? Is there enough airflow clearance between the cooler and the psu? How much does this Noctua's cooler improve over the OEM one, temperature wise? Sorry, so many questions. I'd appreciate very much your feedbacks! I'm debating between a Noctua like yours and  a used Dell/Alienware R5 cooler module.

4 Operator

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2.1K Posts

January 24th, 2023 20:00

Alienware Area-51 R5 or Aurora R5?

You should not need to remove the motherboard to install the Noctua backplate. The XPS 8930 motherboard includes a capable backplate . . . looks like this

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