I have a 4u case that has hot swap 120mm fans (in caddies) with standard female 4-pin pwm connectors.
When slotted into the case, the male PWM connectors that they plug into are powered by a 4-pin molex.
I don't know what kind of fan controller is built into this thing, or what else explains this mystery, but if I power these fans by shorting the 24 pin atx connector to start the psu, the fans run at full speed always.
So my first question is: why is this? Normally you can't control fan speed using just a molex power connector and the presence alone of a motherboard.
I took a multimeter to one while running with a mb in place, and got 12v, so whatever is slowing the fans it's somehow not a reduction of voltage.
(I also have some 2U supermicro cases which seem to do the same thing, though that backplane assembly uses pwm connectors that are basically just extensions, so it makes sense.)
Secondly, I bought a fan controller, anticipating this would be the cheapest way to address the problem. (I'm doing this because I'm turning cases into SAS enclosures, in case at this point you're wondering.) That's when I realized that the fan controller has a 4 pin male pwm header, while the case fans' backplane has that "magical" 4 pin female molex, and for reasons that are obvious when you think about it, an adapter for that doesn't exist.
So I can take the fans' 4 pin female pwm connectors out of their fan caddies, and thread them thru the fan backplane assembly, thereby bypassing the 4 pin molex.
Or I can make my own PWM header to molex male, and risk the certainty of eventually accidentally creating a short curcuit which potentially damages hardware or even data.
My second question is: any other ideas?
Thanks for reading.
When slotted into the case, the male PWM connectors that they plug into are powered by a 4-pin molex.
I don't know what kind of fan controller is built into this thing, or what else explains this mystery, but if I power these fans by shorting the 24 pin atx connector to start the psu, the fans run at full speed always.
So my first question is: why is this? Normally you can't control fan speed using just a molex power connector and the presence alone of a motherboard.
I took a multimeter to one while running with a mb in place, and got 12v, so whatever is slowing the fans it's somehow not a reduction of voltage.
(I also have some 2U supermicro cases which seem to do the same thing, though that backplane assembly uses pwm connectors that are basically just extensions, so it makes sense.)
Secondly, I bought a fan controller, anticipating this would be the cheapest way to address the problem. (I'm doing this because I'm turning cases into SAS enclosures, in case at this point you're wondering.) That's when I realized that the fan controller has a 4 pin male pwm header, while the case fans' backplane has that "magical" 4 pin female molex, and for reasons that are obvious when you think about it, an adapter for that doesn't exist.
So I can take the fans' 4 pin female pwm connectors out of their fan caddies, and thread them thru the fan backplane assembly, thereby bypassing the 4 pin molex.
Or I can make my own PWM header to molex male, and risk the certainty of eventually accidentally creating a short curcuit which potentially damages hardware or even data.
My second question is: any other ideas?
Thanks for reading.
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