Learned a lot from this video. Thank you for making it. One suggestion is to adjust the background music volume down to maybe half. It was a little difficult to understand the dialogue throughout the video.
I got a lot of comments about it. In the future I will not. My voice does not carry well... but at the same time I do not want the video to be super boring!
@@thefrozencpu Ah! I've just spotted this. I've also made a comment about the BGM. I think your presentation and the content is excellent. I've just forced my wife, who has NO interest in PWM fans, to watch your video and she says it's boring. The BGM did not help. :)
I've watched a few other videos to better understand the key difference between the 3 and 4-pin setup. You have made the best video by far. It is simple and direct to the point. Thank you for your explaination!
Thank you for this video. You're explaining method gives all the important details without any irrelevant information. You actually seem to care about your viewers limited time, and that's rare, thank you.
Thank you for your video. I was looking to buy some extension/splitter fan cables and wasn't sure what to buy. Not only was I able to buy the right cables but I learned something new!
@@lovesrc4296 so what do you mean because I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
so damn confusing while shopping for fans. this is my first pc build and learning about each of the 7 main components. then bam! Amazon page is filled with the rainbow of fans. This helped me understand what i'm purchasing and choices. thank you.
Thanks Max. Very helpful. I'm just about to order this NA-FC1 for my new build I'm working on. Clear explanation on voltage control vs PWM so I decided to subscribe as you may be able to enlighten me with useful articles and information in future.
With Molex you can have 3 configurations, 5, 7 and 12V mode. It's just about how you connect your pins on Fan Molex(you can reorder them and you need only 2 wires).
Had a few fans on the HD molex that had a High, medium, and low switch on. Basically that switch is an adjustable resistor and it basically limits the power on that it is set to. The higher the resistance, the slower the fans spins.
I have a 4 pin pwm splitter that splits to 4 pin and 3 pin. The 3 pin end has a 2 pins, empty, and one pin set up (looks like this: II.I ). Can I plug a 3 pin fan into the 3 pin header (only using 2 pins) without issues?
The pin that has been removed is the tach signal, if both ends have a tach signal that would confuse the motherboard as both fans would be reporting it. The motherboard only needs to be able to read one
Random question, not sure if you would know but you seem very knowledgeable. I am making a 3D printed desk fan and am using a Noctua pmw 200mm . Do I have to have the Noctua pmw controller to control the rpm? I haven’t been able to find one I stock so was looking for an alternative.
No you do not. The Noctua controller just controls RPM via the PWM signal. You can use a regular voltage controller as well. They do make small speed dial versions, but you have to make sure your fan does not pull too much current for them. Here is an example on our site: www.frozencpu.com/products/10585/cpa-323/Lian_Li_PT-FN03_PCI_3_Fan_Rheobus_Speed_Controller_PT-FN03.html?id=Eg3S5XIP&mv_pc=57651#blank
@@thefrozencpu thank you very much Sir for the help..I found a small 12 volt 3 pin power supply, then found a fan speed controller that was 3pin . I had to alter the shroud around the 3 pin from the controller to fit the 4 pin into it. It works! But isn’t very powerful..
At around 6:00, would it work the same with only +/- from the PWM controller to the PWM fan, or does it need to use all 4 pins for the regulation to work? I don't get the purpose of the PWM signal cable when the fan is getting 12 volt in pulses from the controller anyway. Cheers :)
It would not... for a PWM controller to work it needs the positive and negative, then the fourth pin which is the PWM signal. The third pin is just a tac which this controller does not require... but you can use that to monitor the fan speed. With PWM instead of adjusting the voltage to change the fan speed, its adjusting what is called the "duty cycle" So lets say you take a fan, and spin it with your finger... lets say if you move that fan once every 5 seconds with your finger, the fan will roughly spin at a certain speed... however if suddenly you started spinning the fan with your finger 3 times every 5 seconds second, the fan would move a lot faster... its just that each one of those "pulses" or "finger spins" are at 12v.... Otherwise without PWM... there is hardware that actually reduces or increases the voltage... but the power is constant on... If you plug a just positive and negative into a PWM header, you will just get that constant 12 volts and get full speed. Hope that makes sense!
@@thefrozencpu Thanks a lot for your thorough explanation! If I have a PWM controller like this one: www.amazon.com/TOOGOO-Controller-Control-Switch-Dimmer/dp/B0757DX8D2 How would I connect the fan? I only see 2 poles. Is the fan +/- connected directly, and the PWM cable through the controller? ...or is this just not the right kind of controller? If so, could you please point me to the kind I need? Preferably a dead cheap one ;) Going to connect a 5v fan. Cheers :)
I assume you are asking if you pulse the power pins directly instead of providing a separate PWM signal? I think it's because the tachometer requires a constant dc signal to operate, so the fan still needs a constant 12v input for it
wow finally someone who explains things clearly,you have a new sub,just wanted to ask a question that maybe you can help me with...i purchased a silverstone TD02-slim AIO for a build,using an asrock Z390 gaming itx/sc board,replaced the fans on the AIO with Noctua NF-A12x15 FLX 120mm 1850RPM Fans,now my issue is that i cannot seem to control the fans speed within the bios or with software,they are daisey chained and connected to the CPU fan header on the MB,now i am wondering the pump on the AIO is only a three pin connection which connects to the cpu fan/pump header is it because of this that i cannot gain control of the fans speeds or set fan curves,and would i be able to activate that 4th pin with an extension or fan hub...am new to building so still quite a newb....hope i get an answer and thank you again for the video
So... the fans are connected to a chain which connects to the pump.. and the pump header is a 3 pin that is connected to the CPU? If that is the case... you are not going to be able to control the fans unless your AIO has built in software like corsair uses. You could just plug the fans into a motherboard header instead and control them separately.
@@thefrozencpu thanks for the reply,managed to sort it out as i had the connections in the wrong header,(doh...face palm),had the pump connected to the cpu/pump header when in fact it needed to be connected to a normal header then the fans finally responded to software and PWM
@@thefrozencpu so what do you mean because I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
I have a fan with an old molex conector, i want to know if its possible to solder the wires to a more modern connector like the one you shown in the video.
Not this controller (PWM). The fan would need the PWM circuity in the motor... which it does NOT have since its a molex fan. It may or may not have a position on the board for RPM, you would have to take it apart and find out! You could control it with a voltage stepper like the large controller though, just not PWM
Brilliant! Thank you very much for this video. Background music was distracting, mind.I think you should lose it whenever you're talking. Thanks, again.
What are the 4 pins on a 4 wire fan with LEDs on the fans? Unfortunately they are all black and no instructions came with them. They are 3 12v fans with heat sink between each one. It is a cpu cooler unit. From Aliexpress so obviously no info provided.
A couple. Firstly you will only see RPM of one of the fans, even if they are the same fan you can only ever see RPM of one of them. The other potential issue is the starting current of the fans is about double the draw of the rated current. As long as they aren't monster 1A or higher fans you should be okay.
Nice video. Can you make fan work with just 12 volt power? I have a fan stopped working. I can make it work again with PWM input. However, it won't turn without PWM input. Is the fan really bad? Thanks.
Basically the 3 pin fan just won't respond to the dial, no speed control since its all being done via PWM circuitry! It will run full blast while the PWM fan will change speed. Thank you!
can you still set fan profile curves through the BIOS when using the Noctua controller? Or does it just stay constant speed to whatever you set it to? (I want to use this with 3 intake fans on a Maximus Hero XI motherboard)
I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
What if you connect a regular 3 pin fan to the Noctua? Will it be able to regulate the speed? Or is it only for PWM fans and regular 12V fans will blast full speed without a possibility to change it?
I loved your explanation, but I found your video because I'm looking for the way to power that noctua PWM controller. I'm doing a diy cooling pad for a laptop and I want to run a 12V 4pin fan, the only problem is I didn't find any pwm controller, except for this noctua, but I can't connect this noctua controller to a DC 12V charger... Or can I? If so, may you explain me how, I really appreciate it.
The power for the controller is via sata, which is only using the 12v and ground on the sata. Depending on the power supply you have, you could use an adapter or solder the leads directly to it?
@@lobsangwhite I do not know if a 2.5mm barrel adapter to sata or a computer connection. You could purchase a female 2.5mm barrel (or whichever size you have) and solder the 12v and ground from the Noctua controller into it. Then you could plug in directly! It is going to be a DIY solution it sounds like.
I am new to this RGB ARGB thing and I do not want a ton of lighted fans in my case. One will be just fine on the front of the case. I purchased a Cooler Master Sickleflow 140mm RGB ARGB fan. I installed it but I have not plugged it in for I found that the fan has a four pin plug and two other type plugs. I know one is to connect to a controller box for RGB ARGB lighting. My question here is if I get a splitter and connect to the only four pin header on my motherboard witch is the CPU fan header would the fan light up or only blow air. Not sure if it has to be connected to one of those little black box controllers for RGB to light.
Hi , in my laptop i had my fan changed , probably a 4 pin fan to a 3 pin socket and so the fan runs ongoing.can cause this the 4 pin fan to the 3 pin motherboard?
No it should not be fine. Fans should have no real issue spinning at full speed. the only way you will be able to reduce the speed on a 3 pin fan is by reducing the current or voltage to it... unlike the PWM. Fans should be perfectly fine running at full speed. The main reason people turn them down is noise.
@@thefrozencpu Thanks for that. I'm confused by the fourth word "not". I presume , having regard to the rest of your thoughtful reply, that this was a typo !!
Basically the PWM control will just set the duty cycle on each fan. This will of course represent a different RPM for different fans because their circuitry is different. Even 2 identical fans will not have the exact same RPM when set the same duty cycle.
So I have a pwm fan splitter (1 to 3). Connector for mob has 4 pins, but only 1 of the 3 splitters has 4 pins. The other 2 splitters have 3 pins. All three fans are pwm. Will all three still be pwm, even the 3 pin splitters?
This is very common. What happens here is the PWM signal is going out to all the fans, the problem is you can only read the RPM of ONE of the three fans. Thats why the other 2 only have 3 wires. Your header would go nuts trying to get the reading from all the different fans, so you will only see RPM from the "master" fan on the connector that has all four pins!
Just don't use a Mag Lev type fan on voltage controlled, only use PWM. The Magnetic levitation will fall out under a certain voltage. For PWM the pulses occur at the same rate, the width of the pulse changes (duty cycle).
One question I can't seem to find an answer to is can the Noctua NA-FC1 be powered just from the SATA power connector as my motherboard does not have a PWM fan header connection.
yes... that is how I do it. The only reason you would want to connect that one cable to the motherboard would be to report RPM. This unit will control PWM all on its own!
That is true. However even with a PWM fan you can still control the voltage with a voltage stepper like the fan controller. Or on your motherboard if for some reason its a 3 pin header, you can still control a PWM fan in your bios. But YES, a PWM fan will spin at whatever voltage the 3 pin header is putting out.. which is usually full 12 volts.
That's not entirely correct as some mobos offer to control the speed over the voltage (DC mode). Then you plug 3 pins on a 4-pin-header leaving the 4th pin (which is always the PWM pin) empty. So really, with some fans already being ultra silent, you don't _need_ PWM; it's a nice-to-have, unless you explicitly _want_ to run fans at very low RPMs, which wouldn't be possible with 3-pin fans since they need a minimum voltage to spin at all, as this video beautifully showcases. PWM basically blasts 12V to get the fan always spinning, but reduces the amount of 12V-pulses per second to reach low RPMs.
I just had my mobo manufacturer, and my fan manufacturer tell me that if I connect 2 fans to a splitter then the tach won't show anything accurate but WILL still allow me to control how many volts is sent to the header, which goes to the cable, basically leaving me with no readable RPM rather sound to use as my gauge for rpm-NOT full power. I intend to connect 3 fans to 1, 12 volt header, and control fan speed either by blow feel or sound. This should be possible, correct? Thanks so much for this video!!!
If you split multiple fans off one tach signal... you will only get a reading from one fan... or the reading will constantly change and will be useless. If you are using all the same fan and splitting them from one header, you could just only use the tach wire from a single fan, that it will rea pretty close to the rest. The only problem with splitting fans on mobo headers is the traces on the boards are very thin... when you first start up your computer, fans hit a much higher current than they are rated at. It takes extra power to start the fans, this COULD potentially burn/melt the trace on the board. So long as the fans you are using are well below 1amp you should be fine though.
I ordered 2 new rgb fans off of newegg to find out they do not fit into my controller that came with my case. The fans have a 4 pin connector and the controller only accepts a smaller 6 pin connector. My main question is since my 4 pin fans do not connect to the 6 pin slots, is their a converter? or do i need to order new fans with the 6 pin power connector. thanks (:
Which fans did you purchase? If they are 6 pin, it sounds like the entire fan has one big connector right? So the fan portion, and the RGB portion are all in one? If this is the case... we do not have a an adapter but you CAN actually get in there and figure out which wires are witch and mod them! I have done with with LianLi fans. Are they Corsair?
Hi Please can you give some answers about my question, I have 6 Argb id cooling fan and its 3 pin but im using a splitter pwm and if i plug that in to my 2 12v rgb header will it possibly work or burn my motherboard?
I have a 4fans that have 3 pin connectors and i want to control or increase the speeds of it does buying a 4pin to 3 3pin Extension will give me the Chance to Adjust its fan speed in the bios?
Hi. No it cannot. The speed controller is only used for controlling the PWM function. To control a 2 or 3 pin fan you would need something to adjust the voltage as seen in the video. PWM does not do that.
I am not familiar with that controller, however it would depends where the PWM control comes from. Does the controller have a PWM wire that hooks up to your motherboard to control the speed with your bios? Or does it have its own remote?
so you have a 3 pin header on your board and your fan is a 4 pin? Yes absolutely, you just will not be able to make use of the PWM function on the fan however you will be able to adjust the speed via the voltage on your mobo if it allows you to.
I have a 3 pin fan conected in a 4 pin conector on my motherboard, apparently this motherboard can't control via voltage, only pwm so what should i do in order to control the fan speed? I found this this thing called a Low-Noise Adaptor, if i use one those would it be possible to control the fan through pwm? Or should i just buy a fan hub?
The low noise adapter is just a wire with a resistor in it to limit the power going to the fan, which will not allow it to run at full speed. If your motherboard cannot be switched to voltage control, then you will need some sort of device that can step that power up and down. Is this an older board? most modern boards have the option to switch between V or PWM
@@thefrozencpu it's a 2012 gigabyte h61m s1 board, haven't found anything on the bios, so a fan hub should get the job done? What other devices can I use to step down the voltage?
@@gabrielh618 well.... most fan hubs just distribute power from your PSU so you don't have to use a single header, so unless you buy a very special one, you still won't be able to control the speed. Can you fit 5.25 bays in your case? that is going to be your best bet. Using something like I used in the video
The PWM wire does not carry much voltage, it is a signal wire for the PWM circuitry the controller or motherboard uses. PWM fans have a constant 12vs on them regardless of the PWM percentage set.
the fan controller is powered by a sata connector, and can run multiple fans through the controller via a splitter. Noctua says at least 5 if not more standard fans.
If i use a 5v non-pwm fan hub with 3pin fans and connect it to a 12v pwm MOBO header will i still be able to regulate the voltage? will i still be able to monitor the RPM and maybe perhaps even enable pwm in the MOBO even though my fans are 3 pin 5v?
It somewhat depends on the motherboard. Most boards only support 12v fans, but the voltage can usually be tuned well below 5v. The only problem there is at startup they will probably burst into 12v for a second or two, then step down. That may hurt your fans. You would have to look into what your motherboard can do a little more closely.
@@thefrozencpu Yeah, my mobo only has a 12v header and my fan splitter is 4 pin 12v also, but it fits the 5v fans and though the splitter i can PWM those 5v fans by temperature. even at 12v they run quiet and without issue.
Many companies use their own RGB connectors. Some fans have a separate 12v header for the fan, and then another for RGB. Some combine all in one. 3 pin rgb is 5v, 4 pin is 12v. What is the model of the item you are referring to?
rgb? this has nothing to do with RGB. generally 12v rgb is 4 pin and 5 volt rgb is 3 pin... RGB generally does not go to a fan header... please be carful!
@@thefrozencpu I think i didn't specify. Today i got a new case and it came with 3 ARGB fans. The fans have 4 pin connectors but my motherboard has 3 pin headers. The lights come with a sepparate molex connector. I'm having issues with this. The fans are not spinning and the lights are not on. This is my first time using RGB.
@@thefrozencpu Ok found out i didn't plug it in fully. Only one fan lights up but doesn't spin. They come with 4 pin and another cable that connects them together (not molex) and there is one molex head that's labeled LED Power.
You can use molex to fan adapters or sata to fan adapters. You could potentially split that header into one or two different fans as well as long as they do not draw more than an amp of current!
Hi, someone can tell me in case I use the Noctua NA-FC1 without pluging into to a motherboard, using it just conecting into to a power supply and into my fans, the NA-FC1 will still controlling it by PWM? Or on this case, because is not conected into motherboard (using motherboard PWM as source) will control the fans just by voltage difference? I mean, this Noctua NA-FC1 has a PWM internal system or it takes the PWM signal from motherboard? I am asking that because I pretending to use this out of PC, just with the fans, power supply and the Noctua NA-FC1 to control it. Thanks for the information!
Its a PWM circuit, it only controls PWM. No voltage control at all. The motherboard thing is more so to read RPM. It will control PWM off just the power supply.
e@@thefrozencpu Thanks so much for the information, this kind of tips is very hard to find. Even the bigger controllers used to control by voltagem change, and the manufacture hardly give this info. So this NA-FC1 will be perfect on my project to control my Noctoa PWM fans without using a PC (mother board) to control it. I tried severals controllers but all works by different of voltage to control RPM, that works but not so nicelly, this one will solve this issue. Thanks again for the help.
@@Varellax You are very welcome. What I find funny is I brought this controller from home to test fans and pumps. I used it as an example for the video but it is starting to become a NA-FC1 review!
Great explanation! I recently built a computer and I was very confused by the fan terminology, but you helped me clear up that confusion!
Glad to be of service!
Learned a lot from this video. Thank you for making it. One suggestion is to adjust the background music volume down to maybe half. It was a little difficult to understand the dialogue throughout the video.
I got a lot of comments about it. In the future I will not. My voice does not carry well... but at the same time I do not want the video to be super boring!
@@thefrozencpu That info is super useful and could be anything but boring! : )
@@thefrozencpu Ah! I've just spotted this. I've also made a comment about the BGM. I think your presentation and the content is excellent. I've just forced my wife, who has NO interest in PWM fans, to watch your video and she says it's boring. The BGM did not help. :)
Awesome explanation! Can defiantly see the benefits and simplicity of the circuitry, Nice one Cheers!
Why so defiant?
I use the noctua fan controller and this video helped me out tremendously.
Clear, succinct, and informative. What could be better? Excellent video!
What could be better? No music. Totally inappropriate and pointless. Otherwise, I agree, great content
Love the Gamers Nexus mod mat ! Good explanation of the types of fans.
Gamer's nexus? This is a FrozenCPU mod mat! We invented them.
Hey thanks of the video. I built my PC back around 2012 and have fallen behind on new stuff. Thanks for the unbiased fact based review!
I've watched a few other videos to better understand the key difference between the 3 and 4-pin setup. You have made the best video by far. It is simple and direct to the point. Thank you for your explaination!
Thats awesome! Thank you very much.
Thank you for this video. You're explaining method gives all the important details without any irrelevant information. You actually seem to care about your viewers limited time, and that's rare, thank you.
Thank you for the kind words!
I’m a huge noob when it comes to pc related stuff, this helped me understand pins thank you!!!!
This video was really helpful. Thank you for showing the fans' differences from a Fan Controller perspective.
You are quite welcome. We are glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you for your video. I was looking to buy some extension/splitter fan cables and wasn't sure what to buy. Not only was I able to buy the right cables but I learned something new!
Awesome! Feel free to email max@frozencpu.com with an questions
@@lovesrc4296 so what do you mean because I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
so damn confusing while shopping for fans. this is my first pc build and learning about each of the 7 main components. then bam! Amazon page is filled with the rainbow of fans. This helped me understand what i'm purchasing and choices. thank you.
Thanks Max. Very helpful. I'm just about to order this NA-FC1 for my new build I'm working on. Clear explanation on voltage control vs PWM so I decided to subscribe as you may be able to enlighten me with useful articles and information in future.
You are very welcome. Thank you!
Exactly the video i was looking for 12 years.
With Molex you can have 3 configurations, 5, 7 and 12V mode.
It's just about how you connect your pins on Fan Molex(you can reorder them and you need only 2 wires).
Had a few fans on the HD molex that had a High, medium, and low switch on. Basically that switch is an adjustable resistor and it basically limits the power on that it is set to. The higher the resistance, the slower the fans spins.
Oh yeah, I had an old azza solano 1000 case that had a little built in speed switch for one of the larger fans.
Nice video, I learned a lot info about 3 and 4 pins, but music in background is pretty load + noise from fans, could u fix it next video? thnx :)
I have a 4 pin pwm splitter that splits to 4 pin and 3 pin. The 3 pin end has a 2 pins, empty, and one pin set up (looks like this: II.I ). Can I plug a 3 pin fan into the 3 pin header (only using 2 pins) without issues?
Great video. Question. Why do fan 1to2 splitter cables have one end a 3 pin with 3rd pin missing and the other is all 4 pins?
The pin that has been removed is the tach signal, if both ends have a tach signal that would confuse the motherboard as both fans would be reporting it. The motherboard only needs to be able to read one
thanks for the post, help me out to comprehend my broken gpu fan controller
So if I buy a new Noctua 4pin PWM fan, and I would like to use it with a 2 Pin header, as a 2 Pin fan. Can i do it, with an adapter?
Great video !
Thank you
You answer all my question. It’s very helpful Thank you!
Random question, not sure if you would know but you seem very knowledgeable.
I am making a 3D printed desk fan and am using a Noctua pmw 200mm . Do I have to have the Noctua pmw controller to control the rpm? I haven’t been able to find one I stock so was looking for an alternative.
No you do not. The Noctua controller just controls RPM via the PWM signal. You can use a regular voltage controller as well. They do make small speed dial versions, but you have to make sure your fan does not pull too much current for them. Here is an example on our site: www.frozencpu.com/products/10585/cpa-323/Lian_Li_PT-FN03_PCI_3_Fan_Rheobus_Speed_Controller_PT-FN03.html?id=Eg3S5XIP&mv_pc=57651#blank
@@thefrozencpu thank you very much Sir for the help..I found a small 12 volt 3 pin power supply, then found a fan speed controller that was 3pin . I had to alter the shroud around the 3 pin from the controller to fit the 4 pin into it. It works! But isn’t very powerful..
My guy, this is really a good video!
Thanks for such a clear and technical explanation.
You are welcome.
exactly the answer i was looking for! thank you!!
Welcome!
Can you do a test on slowing down sunon maglev server fans and testing how loud they get?
At around 6:00, would it work the same with only +/- from the PWM controller to the PWM fan,
or does it need to use all 4 pins for the regulation to work? I don't get the purpose of the PWM
signal cable when the fan is getting 12 volt in pulses from the controller anyway.
Cheers :)
It would not... for a PWM controller to work it needs the positive and negative, then the fourth pin which is the PWM signal. The third pin is just a tac which this controller does not require... but you can use that to monitor the fan speed. With PWM instead of adjusting the voltage to change the fan speed, its adjusting what is called the "duty cycle"
So lets say you take a fan, and spin it with your finger... lets say if you move that fan once every 5 seconds with your finger, the fan will roughly spin at a certain speed... however if suddenly you started spinning the fan with your finger 3 times every 5 seconds second, the fan would move a lot faster... its just that each one of those "pulses" or "finger spins" are at 12v....
Otherwise without PWM... there is hardware that actually reduces or increases the voltage... but the power is constant on... If you plug a just positive and negative into a PWM header, you will just get that constant 12 volts and get full speed.
Hope that makes sense!
@@thefrozencpu
Thanks a lot for your thorough explanation! If I have a PWM controller like this one:
www.amazon.com/TOOGOO-Controller-Control-Switch-Dimmer/dp/B0757DX8D2
How would I connect the fan? I only see 2 poles. Is the fan +/- connected directly, and the
PWM cable through the controller?
...or is this just not the right kind of controller?
If so, could you please point me to the kind I need? Preferably a dead cheap one ;)
Going to connect a 5v fan.
Cheers :)
I assume you are asking if you pulse the power pins directly instead of providing a separate PWM signal? I think it's because the tachometer requires a constant dc signal to operate, so the fan still needs a constant 12v input for it
Thanks for clearing things out!
the same pwm effect is used in oled displays right?
wow finally someone who explains things clearly,you have a new sub,just wanted to ask a question that maybe you can help me with...i purchased a silverstone TD02-slim AIO for a build,using an asrock Z390 gaming itx/sc board,replaced the fans on the AIO with Noctua NF-A12x15 FLX 120mm 1850RPM Fans,now my issue is that i cannot seem to control the fans speed within the bios or with software,they are daisey chained and connected to the CPU fan header on the MB,now i am wondering the pump on the AIO is only a three pin connection which connects to the cpu fan/pump header is it because of this that i cannot gain control of the fans speeds or set fan curves,and would i be able to activate that 4th pin with an extension or fan hub...am new to building so still quite a newb....hope i get an answer and thank you again for the video
So... the fans are connected to a chain which connects to the pump.. and the pump header is a 3 pin that is connected to the CPU? If that is the case... you are not going to be able to control the fans unless your AIO has built in software like corsair uses. You could just plug the fans into a motherboard header instead and control them separately.
@@thefrozencpu thanks for the reply,managed to sort it out as i had the connections in the wrong header,(doh...face palm),had the pump connected to the cpu/pump header when in fact it needed to be connected to a normal header then the fans finally responded to software and PWM
@@thefrozencpu so what do you mean because I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
I have a fan with an old molex conector, i want to know if its possible to solder the wires to a more modern connector like the one you shown in the video.
Not this controller (PWM). The fan would need the PWM circuity in the motor... which it does NOT have since its a molex fan. It may or may not have a position on the board for RPM, you would have to take it apart and find out! You could control it with a voltage stepper like the large controller though, just not PWM
Interesante informacion, excelente video, disculpa donde conseguiste el regulador PWM noctua ?
Am I the only person who noticed the Ruff Ryders shirt? Excellent taste!
; )
cheers you answered my question
Brilliant! Thank you very much for this video. Background music was distracting, mind.I think you should lose it whenever you're talking.
Thanks, again.
What are the 4 pins on a 4 wire fan with LEDs on the fans? Unfortunately they are all black and no instructions came with them. They are 3 12v fans with heat sink between each one. It is a cpu cooler unit. From Aliexpress so obviously no info provided.
Really helpful video. Thank you!
Nice video does it matter what way up or down the plug is plugged into the mb pins
If I am understanding what you mean, no it does not as long as the pins line up with the correct voltages and signals. It should only plug in one way!
Is there any draw back of using Y-splitter cable to plug 2 PWM fans into one 4-pin header?
A couple. Firstly you will only see RPM of one of the fans, even if they are the same fan you can only ever see RPM of one of them. The other potential issue is the starting current of the fans is about double the draw of the rated current. As long as they aren't monster 1A or higher fans you should be okay.
Great explanation, very useful, thanks!
Nice video. Can you make fan work with just 12 volt power? I have a fan stopped working. I can make it work again with PWM input. However, it won't turn without PWM input. Is the fan really bad? Thanks.
Great video, New subscriber! Question- What happens if you connect one 3pin fan and one 4 pin fan to the noctua controller?
Basically the 3 pin fan just won't respond to the dial, no speed control since its all being done via PWM circuitry! It will run full blast while the PWM fan will change speed. Thank you!
@@thefrozencpu that's what I thought but I wanted to hear it from the Frozen CPU expert!
Great quality info here
can you still set fan profile curves through the BIOS when using the Noctua controller? Or does it just stay constant speed to whatever you set it to? (I want to use this with 3 intake fans on a Maximus Hero XI motherboard)
I was about to get one 4pin splitter from my 6 corsair ll120 fans but in the discribtion of the product says (the fan splitter can control only 1of the 4 fans so what does this mean ?can I control all of the fans pwm speeds or no plz answer me I need your help.
What is the input cleab for the noctua fan controller?
Hi. the input what now? I think you have a typo there, or cleab is a word I don't know. The Noctua controller uses a sata power cable.
What if you connect a regular 3 pin fan to the Noctua? Will it be able to regulate the speed? Or is it only for PWM fans and regular 12V fans will blast full speed without a possibility to change it?
Correct. With this controller you will just get full blast. It does not adjust voltage or look at RPM, just the PWM signal.
Thanks for the vid dude 👍
I loved your explanation, but I found your video because I'm looking for the way to power that noctua PWM controller. I'm doing a diy cooling pad for a laptop and I want to run a 12V 4pin fan, the only problem is I didn't find any pwm controller, except for this noctua, but I can't connect this noctua controller to a DC 12V charger... Or can I? If so, may you explain me how, I really appreciate it.
The power for the controller is via sata, which is only using the 12v and ground on the sata. Depending on the power supply you have, you could use an adapter or solder the leads directly to it?
@@thefrozencpu do I need the ground? because DC chargers have no one
@@lobsangwhite yes you need plus and minus. It should have a ground, what type of connector is on it?
@@thefrozencpu power supply is a DC charger with barrel interface (2551), the idea is to DIY some connector/adapter to power the noctua controller.
@@lobsangwhite I do not know if a 2.5mm barrel adapter to sata or a computer connection. You could purchase a female 2.5mm barrel (or whichever size you have) and solder the 12v and ground from the Noctua controller into it. Then you could plug in directly! It is going to be a DIY solution it sounds like.
Great video dude!!!!
Awesome video! Very helpful thank you
I am new to this RGB ARGB thing and I do not want a ton of lighted fans in my case. One will be just fine on the front of the case. I purchased a Cooler Master Sickleflow 140mm RGB ARGB fan. I installed it but I have not plugged it in for I found that the fan has a four pin plug and two other type plugs. I know one is to connect to a controller box for RGB ARGB lighting. My question here is if I get a splitter and connect to the only four pin header on my motherboard witch is the CPU fan header would the fan light up or only blow air. Not sure if it has to be connected to one of those little black box controllers for RGB to light.
Can you shoot me a link to the fan? I need to look at its connections
Hi , in my laptop i had my fan changed , probably a 4 pin fan to a 3 pin socket and so the fan runs ongoing.can cause this the 4 pin fan to the 3 pin motherboard?
I replaced a 4 pin fan with a 3 pin. It operates just fine but I presume at full speed 100% of the time. Is reliability an issue?
No it should not be fine. Fans should have no real issue spinning at full speed. the only way you will be able to reduce the speed on a 3 pin fan is by reducing the current or voltage to it... unlike the PWM. Fans should be perfectly fine running at full speed. The main reason people turn them down is noise.
@@thefrozencpu Thanks for that. I'm confused by the fourth word "not". I presume , having regard to the rest of your thoughtful reply, that this was a typo !!
Thanks for easy and good explanation 😊
One question: how work connect different Min/max rpm fans to the na-fc1? Does the same impulse trigger different rpms on different fans? Thank you
Basically the PWM control will just set the duty cycle on each fan. This will of course represent a different RPM for different fans because their circuitry is different. Even 2 identical fans will not have the exact same RPM when set the same duty cycle.
can you masure the rotation speed at the yello wire. and the speed can be switched with red en black.due changing the voltage? (3pin)
So I have a pwm fan splitter (1 to 3). Connector for mob has 4 pins, but only 1 of the 3 splitters has 4 pins. The other 2 splitters have 3 pins. All three fans are pwm. Will all three still be pwm, even the 3 pin splitters?
This is very common. What happens here is the PWM signal is going out to all the fans, the problem is you can only read the RPM of ONE of the three fans. Thats why the other 2 only have 3 wires. Your header would go nuts trying to get the reading from all the different fans, so you will only see RPM from the "master" fan on the connector that has all four pins!
Thanks bro' it was a pretty clear and informative video.
Just don't use a Mag Lev type fan on voltage controlled, only use PWM. The Magnetic levitation will fall out under a certain voltage. For PWM the pulses occur at the same rate, the width of the pulse changes (duty cycle).
Nice video. Thank you for all the information.
Absolutely!
One question I can't seem to find an answer to is can the Noctua NA-FC1 be powered just from the SATA power connector as my motherboard does not have a PWM fan header connection.
yes... that is how I do it. The only reason you would want to connect that one cable to the motherboard would be to report RPM. This unit will control PWM all on its own!
maybe you should add that if you connect a 3-pin non-PWM fan to a PWM header it will spin at full speed since the voltage is fixed at12V.
That is true. However even with a PWM fan you can still control the voltage with a voltage stepper like the fan controller. Or on your motherboard if for some reason its a 3 pin header, you can still control a PWM fan in your bios. But YES, a PWM fan will spin at whatever voltage the 3 pin header is putting out.. which is usually full 12 volts.
That's not entirely correct as some mobos offer to control the speed over the voltage (DC mode). Then you plug 3 pins on a 4-pin-header leaving the 4th pin (which is always the PWM pin) empty. So really, with some fans already being ultra silent, you don't _need_ PWM; it's a nice-to-have, unless you explicitly _want_ to run fans at very low RPMs, which wouldn't be possible with 3-pin fans since they need a minimum voltage to spin at all, as this video beautifully showcases. PWM basically blasts 12V to get the fan always spinning, but reduces the amount of 12V-pulses per second to reach low RPMs.
Can I control a 3 pin fan speed with the Noctua PWN controller?
I don't understand why do people unlike that kind of video.
I just had my mobo manufacturer, and my fan manufacturer tell me that if I connect 2 fans to a splitter then the tach won't show anything accurate but WILL still allow me to control how many volts is sent to the header, which goes to the cable, basically leaving me with no readable RPM rather sound to use as my gauge for rpm-NOT full power.
I intend to connect 3 fans to 1, 12 volt header, and control fan speed either by blow feel or sound. This should be possible, correct?
Thanks so much for this video!!!
If you split multiple fans off one tach signal... you will only get a reading from one fan... or the reading will constantly change and will be useless. If you are using all the same fan and splitting them from one header, you could just only use the tach wire from a single fan, that it will rea pretty close to the rest. The only problem with splitting fans on mobo headers is the traces on the boards are very thin... when you first start up your computer, fans hit a much higher current than they are rated at. It takes extra power to start the fans, this COULD potentially burn/melt the trace on the board. So long as the fans you are using are well below 1amp you should be fine though.
@@thefrozencpu Ya I just learned that as well. Each are 5X lower than 1. LOLOL Like how I said that? But ya, I'm golden for sure.
amazing vid
Thank you
very nice video. you deserve more subs
Thank you!
I ordered 2 new rgb fans off of newegg to find out they do not fit into my controller that came with my case. The fans have a 4 pin connector and the controller only accepts a smaller 6 pin connector.
My main question is since my 4 pin fans do not connect to the 6 pin slots, is their a converter? or do i need to order new fans with the 6 pin power connector.
thanks (:
Which fans did you purchase? If they are 6 pin, it sounds like the entire fan has one big connector right? So the fan portion, and the RGB portion are all in one? If this is the case... we do not have a an adapter but you CAN actually get in there and figure out which wires are witch and mod them! I have done with with LianLi fans. Are they Corsair?
Hi Please can you give some answers about my question, I have 6 Argb id cooling fan and its 3 pin but im using a splitter pwm and if i plug that in to my 2 12v rgb header will it possibly work or burn my motherboard?
I have a 4fans that have 3 pin connectors and i want to control or increase the speeds of it does buying a 4pin to 3 3pin Extension will give me the Chance to Adjust its fan speed in the bios?
Can i connect a 3 pin fan to a 4pin 12v header?
sure!
Shoot I should have watched your video prior buying my items. Now I have to make another order for pwm...
Can the noctu fc be used to control the speed of a 2 wire fan ? Thanks
Hi. No it cannot. The speed controller is only used for controlling the PWM function. To control a 2 or 3 pin fan you would need something to adjust the voltage as seen in the video. PWM does not do that.
i have a Antec A400 RGB Cooler 4 pin pwm and was wondering can i adjust fan speed with asus software ?
I am not familiar with that controller, however it would depends where the PWM control comes from. Does the controller have a PWM wire that hooks up to your motherboard to control the speed with your bios? Or does it have its own remote?
Is there any way to control 3 pin through a software? Can we control voltage of mobo for fans?
I have a be quiet Silent Wings 3 fan with a 4 pin connector but I have a 3 pin connector on my motherboard can I still connect them?
so you have a 3 pin header on your board and your fan is a 4 pin? Yes absolutely, you just will not be able to make use of the PWM function on the fan however you will be able to adjust the speed via the voltage on your mobo if it allows you to.
Excellent!
Thank you
So can i power the pwm controller just from a fixed output 12vdc power supply without the use of a motherboard
absolutely! It just needs 12v. Comes with a sata plug but you could cut that off and use whatever on it.
How about rgb fan? It needs 3pin 5v but i have 4pin 12v.
I have a 3 pin fan conected in a 4 pin conector on my motherboard, apparently this motherboard can't control via voltage, only pwm so what should i do in order to control the fan speed? I found this this thing called a Low-Noise Adaptor, if i use one those would it be possible to control the fan through pwm? Or should i just buy a fan hub?
The low noise adapter is just a wire with a resistor in it to limit the power going to the fan, which will not allow it to run at full speed. If your motherboard cannot be switched to voltage control, then you will need some sort of device that can step that power up and down. Is this an older board? most modern boards have the option to switch between V or PWM
@@thefrozencpu it's a 2012 gigabyte h61m s1 board, haven't found anything on the bios, so a fan hub should get the job done? What other devices can I use to step down the voltage?
@@gabrielh618 well.... most fan hubs just distribute power from your PSU so you don't have to use a single header, so unless you buy a very special one, you still won't be able to control the speed. Can you fit 5.25 bays in your case? that is going to be your best bet. Using something like I used in the video
@@thefrozencpu sure, I thought of buying one but I just ended up getting a pwm fan. Thanks for help dude.
Thanks a lot!!!
23khz and what is volt in pwm blue wire ? please reply
The PWM wire does not carry much voltage, it is a signal wire for the PWM circuitry the controller or motherboard uses. PWM fans have a constant 12vs on them regardless of the PWM percentage set.
Very nice Mate, just need to lower down the music a bit...
How do we connect the pwm fan with the controller to eclecticity?
the fan controller is powered by a sata connector, and can run multiple fans through the controller via a splitter. Noctua says at least 5 if not more standard fans.
If i use a 5v non-pwm fan hub with 3pin fans and connect it to a 12v pwm MOBO header will i still be able to regulate the voltage? will i still be able to monitor the RPM and maybe perhaps even enable pwm in the MOBO even though my fans are 3 pin 5v?
It somewhat depends on the motherboard. Most boards only support 12v fans, but the voltage can usually be tuned well below 5v. The only problem there is at startup they will probably burst into 12v for a second or two, then step down. That may hurt your fans. You would have to look into what your motherboard can do a little more closely.
@@thefrozencpu Yeah, my mobo only has a 12v header and my fan splitter is 4 pin 12v also, but it fits the 5v fans and though the splitter i can PWM those 5v fans by temperature. even at 12v they run quiet and without issue.
Hey sir can i ask about my problem, i have 6 Argb id cooling fan and i have 2 12 v header rgb is it compatible when i plug that in??
Many companies use their own RGB connectors. Some fans have a separate 12v header for the fan, and then another for RGB. Some combine all in one. 3 pin rgb is 5v, 4 pin is 12v. What is the model of the item you are referring to?
Thx for info!
I subscribed
So can i plug 4 pin rgb fan to 3 pin on my motherboard (P5KC)
rgb? this has nothing to do with RGB. generally 12v rgb is 4 pin and 5 volt rgb is 3 pin... RGB generally does not go to a fan header... please be carful!
@@thefrozencpu I think i didn't specify. Today i got a new case and it came with 3 ARGB fans. The fans have 4 pin connectors but my motherboard has 3 pin headers. The lights come with a sepparate molex connector. I'm having issues with this. The fans are not spinning and the lights are not on. This is my first time using RGB.
@@TinTin3k How many wires on are in the 4 pin connectors for the fan cable? the non rgb cable?
@@thefrozencpu Ok found out i didn't plug it in fully. Only one fan lights up but doesn't spin. They come with 4 pin and another cable that connects them together (not molex) and there is one molex head that's labeled LED Power.
고마워
Can you lower the db on the audio hard to hear you talk at some points
the audio and music is rendered as one... kinda hard to do that at this point sorry.
So I should split my header and get PWM. its too loud. wish I knew this before. live and learn. Thanks
Split your header?
Good video!
i dont have any type of case fan headers in my mother board expet cpu fan header any idea to add extra fans
You can use molex to fan adapters or sata to fan adapters. You could potentially split that header into one or two different fans as well as long as they do not draw more than an amp of current!
Hi, someone can tell me in case I use the Noctua NA-FC1 without pluging into to a motherboard, using it just conecting into to a power supply and into my fans, the NA-FC1 will still controlling it by PWM? Or on this case, because is not conected into motherboard (using motherboard PWM as source) will control the fans just by voltage difference? I mean, this Noctua NA-FC1 has a PWM internal system or it takes the PWM signal from motherboard? I am asking that because I pretending to use this out of PC, just with the fans, power supply and the Noctua NA-FC1 to control it. Thanks for the information!
Its a PWM circuit, it only controls PWM. No voltage control at all. The motherboard thing is more so to read RPM. It will control PWM off just the power supply.
e@@thefrozencpu Thanks so much for the information, this kind of tips is very hard to find. Even the bigger controllers used to control by voltagem change, and the manufacture hardly give this info. So this NA-FC1 will be perfect on my project to control my Noctoa PWM fans without using a PC (mother board) to control it. I tried severals controllers but all works by different of voltage to control RPM, that works but not so nicelly, this one will solve this issue. Thanks again for the help.
@@Varellax You are very welcome. What I find funny is I brought this controller from home to test fans and pumps. I used it as an example for the video but it is starting to become a NA-FC1 review!
so thats why my computer is spinning fast 24/7
why wasting money for that pwm controller if i can make basic pwm controller with just ne556 square wave generator for just under 5 bucks