I have undervolted the card - was able to bring the voltage down without lowering clocks any so no loss in performance. Have tried adjusting the fan curve as well. Unfortunately, it seems that's where AMD's drivers get me - I've tried increasing the point at which the fans ramp up, and also manually disabling fan-stop mode an an attempt to run them at a slow speed at low load to keep temps down. The issue is that the card doesn't seem to respond to my set curves. I'll have the first point set 20% RPM at 25C and the card still operates in fan-stop mode until about 60C and then ramps up hard.
As for the noise-dampened case, as
@Valantar mentions, the noise-dampening is negated by higher fan speeds due to higher thermals. I'm trying to avoid having to buy a new case if possible as I like the aesthetics and footprint of the Meshify C.
Yeah, I agree. Noise is the main motivation for wanting to watercool the card, but PC hardware has become a hobby and I'd happily throw some more money at it. Aesthetics are a concern, but I have thought about strapping some good fans onto the card. Maybe I'll give that a try first, as I'll have to end up buying fans for a rad if I do go the watercooling route anyway. Was thinking of splitting them to a single motherboard header and setting their fan curve in the BIOS based on GPU temperature. Of course, I could also just live with the noise - after doing some preliminary research, it looks like watercooling the card would be quite an undertaking. I'd have to figure out where to put the res/pump (would like to avoid having to drill holes in the PSU shroud), and working in just the lower confines of the main chamber (as to avoid the Dark Rock 4 I have cooling the CPU) might get cramped. I considered scrapping the Dark Rock 4 and just adding a CPU/monoblock, but it looks like there aren't any monoblocks for the B450 Gaming Pro Carbon, and all the CPU blocks I've seen for AM4 appear to have clearance issues due to the large heatsinks. So I'd likely have to get a new mobo to add a CPU block, which I would also like to avoid. Only possible way I can think of fitting everything without mods is going with a 280 rad in front, removing the cover at the front end of the PSU shroud and doing a pump/res combo down in the basement and then doing a run up to the GPU. Idk, I'm completely new to all this and still have a lot of research to do so I could be overthinking it/getting discouraged for no reason. Just think chucking a waterblock on the GPU would be a fun (albeit expensive) foray into watercooling.