Is there any way I can tell if Deepcool's FH-04 fan hub can control speed for 3-pin fans? Or does anyone here have experience with this component?
I have a Gigabyte Z590 UD AC motherboard, and am looking to connect 3 x be quiet Shadow Wings 2 120mm to a single fan header. The specs say that the motherboard sys fan header can deliver 2A current, and the Shadow Wings 2 specs say that a 120mm fan needs 0.12A. If my research is correct, three fans on one header should work.
I'm limited in terms of components available for the split fan connection, and my only viable option seems to be Deepcool's FH-04. My problem is that the product page claims "compatible with 3-pin fans", but I can't figure out if this actually means that the fans will have variable speeds, or if there's a risk that they will run at 100%, since it's a PWM hub. For other PWM hubs I've found, it turned out in reviews that they only run 3-pin fans at 100% due to how the limited circuitry works in the hub, but I haven't found anything similar for the FH-04 yet.
I have a Gigabyte Z590 UD AC motherboard, and am looking to connect 3 x be quiet Shadow Wings 2 120mm to a single fan header. The specs say that the motherboard sys fan header can deliver 2A current, and the Shadow Wings 2 specs say that a 120mm fan needs 0.12A. If my research is correct, three fans on one header should work.
I'm limited in terms of components available for the split fan connection, and my only viable option seems to be Deepcool's FH-04. My problem is that the product page claims "compatible with 3-pin fans", but I can't figure out if this actually means that the fans will have variable speeds, or if there's a risk that they will run at 100%, since it's a PWM hub. For other PWM hubs I've found, it turned out in reviews that they only run 3-pin fans at 100% due to how the limited circuitry works in the hub, but I haven't found anything similar for the FH-04 yet.