F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Problema de control del ventilador Asus Q-Fan El ventilador no responde correctamente o se atasca.

Problema de control del ventilador Asus Q-Fan El ventilador no responde correctamente o se atasca.

Problema de control del ventilador Asus Q-Fan El ventilador no responde correctamente o se atasca.

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PottuJ_
Junior Member
46
07-09-2016, 08:28 PM
#1
Hello! Your chassis fans currently run at different duty cycles—60% for the first and 20% for the second. To lower noise while staying above 60%, you might need to tweak the fan curves carefully. I've already tried adjusting everything, but it's proving difficult.
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PottuJ_
07-09-2016, 08:28 PM #1

Hello! Your chassis fans currently run at different duty cycles—60% for the first and 20% for the second. To lower noise while staying above 60%, you might need to tweak the fan curves carefully. I've already tried adjusting everything, but it's proving difficult.

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Pekaaa
Member
206
07-12-2016, 02:02 PM
#2
Find the chassis fan connection on your motherboard—it resembles a pump header. Make sure the pump header stays active; this likely explains why you can't lower the case fan below 60%. Look inside your PC to see where the fan is connected, and change it to a fan header instead.
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Pekaaa
07-12-2016, 02:02 PM #2

Find the chassis fan connection on your motherboard—it resembles a pump header. Make sure the pump header stays active; this likely explains why you can't lower the case fan below 60%. Look inside your PC to see where the fan is connected, and change it to a fan header instead.

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Gothipep
Junior Member
13
07-19-2016, 03:08 PM
#3
I confirmed the fans are connected to chassis fan 1 and 2. I suspect the issue might be with the fan extensions, though I’m not sure since speed control is via voltage.
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Gothipep
07-19-2016, 03:08 PM #3

I confirmed the fans are connected to chassis fan 1 and 2. I suspect the issue might be with the fan extensions, though I’m not sure since speed control is via voltage.

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james26665
Senior Member
537
07-19-2016, 09:46 PM
#4
Which fans are you using? And which motherboard are you connected to?
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james26665
07-19-2016, 09:46 PM #4

Which fans are you using? And which motherboard are you connected to?

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Spectrexis
Junior Member
45
07-19-2016, 11:20 PM
#5
For precise fan adjustments, opt for PWM mode. Ensure your fans have a 4-pin connector. 3-pin models are limited to DC speed regulation.
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Spectrexis
07-19-2016, 11:20 PM #5

For precise fan adjustments, opt for PWM mode. Ensure your fans have a 4-pin connector. 3-pin models are limited to DC speed regulation.

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scraftonWes
Junior Member
9
07-20-2016, 08:10 AM
#6
I manage six fans in total. Five are Arctic P14 models and one is a deepcool unit. I'm using an ASUS Prime B550 Plus with a motherboard. On my previous system, I had identical fans and fan extensions, and I could adjust their speeds via the BIOS. The last motherboard was an ASUS Prime B250M-A.
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scraftonWes
07-20-2016, 08:10 AM #6

I manage six fans in total. Five are Arctic P14 models and one is a deepcool unit. I'm using an ASUS Prime B550 Plus with a motherboard. On my previous system, I had identical fans and fan extensions, and I could adjust their speeds via the BIOS. The last motherboard was an ASUS Prime B250M-A.

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Bhdrglr7
Member
55
07-20-2016, 08:56 AM
#7
You checked Q-fan settings and adjusted the fans, but they still don’t drop below 60%. It could mean the fan can’t go lower. You’ll need a low-noise adapter instead.
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Bhdrglr7
07-20-2016, 08:56 AM #7

You checked Q-fan settings and adjusted the fans, but they still don’t drop below 60%. It could mean the fan can’t go lower. You’ll need a low-noise adapter instead.

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Seve_PT
Member
229
07-20-2016, 06:12 PM
#8
Considering an overall hub with PWM control might be a good idea.
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Seve_PT
07-20-2016, 06:12 PM #8

Considering an overall hub with PWM control might be a good idea.

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basikitkat
Junior Member
35
07-21-2016, 02:45 AM
#9
If the fan won’t drop below my expectations, a hub probably won’t help much. Unless you’re out of headers and must use a pump header that can’t be adjusted for proper fan speed. A quiet adapter works well since the fan spins under 60%, but I doubt it’s tuned correctly. I believe 60% is the standard setting for uncalibrated fans, ensuring all units run smoothly without needing BIOS changes.
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basikitkat
07-21-2016, 02:45 AM #9

If the fan won’t drop below my expectations, a hub probably won’t help much. Unless you’re out of headers and must use a pump header that can’t be adjusted for proper fan speed. A quiet adapter works well since the fan spins under 60%, but I doubt it’s tuned correctly. I believe 60% is the standard setting for uncalibrated fans, ensuring all units run smoothly without needing BIOS changes.

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MAGICALfalcon
Junior Member
24
07-21-2016, 04:01 AM
#10
I changed to DC and the computer became much quieter. Thanks everyone!
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MAGICALfalcon
07-21-2016, 04:01 AM #10

I changed to DC and the computer became much quieter. Thanks everyone!

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