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Intel 4 pin fan pinout
Intel 4 pin fan pinout









intel 4 pin fan pinout
  1. #Intel 4 pin fan pinout how to
  2. #Intel 4 pin fan pinout generator
  3. #Intel 4 pin fan pinout full
  4. #Intel 4 pin fan pinout pro

I am trying to make sense of your post where you provided a very simple and apparently working solution by adding a 1k Ohm resistor between Vcc and PMW lines to the fan.

#Intel 4 pin fan pinout pro

So I have 5 mac pro 2006 fans that I want to use in a hybrid mac pro/hackintosh/atx build. Can it be +5V fault? If I connected to fan to +12V it spins very there, Then I control PWM signal up or down I heard strange sound going from fan.

#Intel 4 pin fan pinout how to

How to know which way is good which is bad? I don't know why and how it work in the both ways.

#Intel 4 pin fan pinout generator

I used +5V to power PWM generator and macpro fan, want they work very quietly. In both diagrams I used various resistors from 1k ohm to 100k ohm, because 1k ohm did not work for me(guessing because I connected m fan to my pwm generator). This diagram connected by this theory (GND = Ground VM = +12 O / P = Sense /Tacho VCC = PWM) This diagram connected by this theory (GND = Ground VCC = +12 O / P = Sense /Tacho VM = PWM)Ģ. Here are two diagrams who shows how I connected fan to PWM generator and power supply in two ways:ġ. I made PWM fan generator(did not want to connect to my computer motherboard) for testing. I have made a little research and found interesting thing.

intel 4 pin fan pinout

You want make opposite thing than I'm doing. The result would permit the pulsed motherboard signal to vary the MacPro fan thanks for good info, finally I made mac pro fan I think you in the same and different case in the same time. The stable output voltage would then feed back to the fan to control its speed. You'd connect the oscillating 12V wave to an appropriately sized capacitor to smooth the output into a stable voltage. The general approach is to use the motherboard speed signal to drive a transistor, which acts as a valve to vary a 12V power source. This would require building a small circuit to convert the motherboard pin-4 speed signal (pulsed on/off) and generate a continuous 0 to 12V signal that would feed into the MacPro fan. Someday, if I want to overclock the system, I could implement the variable speed feature. There is plenty of cooling for a 2700K CPU, and I haven't really found the need to increase the fan speed. My ASUS rig has a few of these fans running using 5V for the fan speed setting. If all is well, your fan will be spinning at a good rate, and you can go into your BIOS display to see the actual fan speed. A good source is to tap straight from the Power Supply Unit (PSU) using one of the +5V pins from an unused disk drive molex connector. Everything is ready to go, you just need to apply a voltage (0 to 12V) to the speed control wire that you just release from the connector.

intel 4 pin fan pinout

One pin 4 is out, you can safely plug the socket into an Intel motherboard fan connector port. If it doesn't slide out easily, you aren't squeezing the retaining tab in the right spot. The Pin 4 wire will pull out of the socket. The simple trick is to use a small knife and squeeze the retaining pin on the Pin 4 plug connector.

#Intel 4 pin fan pinout full

The Mac Case fan wants an actual voltage which would be on continuously at ~3v for the same quarter of full speed. So if the control is on for a 1/4 of a second, and is then off for 3/4, the fan would run at 1/4 of full speed. To vary the fan speed, the voltage is toggled on and off, with the duty cycle representing the fan speed. The problem is that on your motherboard, pin 4 uses the Intel fan control standard. Pin 4 - Speed control pin (1V = slow, 5V=moderate, 12V=jet engine fast) The pinout for the MacPro fan looks like the following: It's been a few years since I built my box using a 2009 MacPro case, but if memory serves, here's what you do: That being said, you can get it run with just a few simple tricks. The fan in the MacPro case isn't really compatible with an Intel based motherboard. My apologies for posting to an old thread, but since you haven't received a reply, I'll provide a description for the benefit of others who may read this. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide











Intel 4 pin fan pinout