how to force a cpu fan to run at 100% speed

Arif Hassan

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May 28, 2014
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I want to run my cpu fan at full speed because temperature is rising too much it reaches at 61.c while gaming.
i disabled smart fan control in bios then also it's not running at full speed but speed increases about 1000 rpm more by disabling smart cpu fan control in bios.
is there any way to run the cpu fan at full speed?
My system specs
Amd fx 4300 no oc
Gpu gtx 750 ti
4 gb ram
Ga-78lmt-s2 rev 1.2 motherboard
Thanks
 
Solution


CPUs typcially can handle upwards of 90-100'C before they shut down. They will start to lose performance in the 85-90'C range. 60'C is perfectly fine, especially for a stock cooler. If you want anything lower then you will need to get a good air cooler or liquid cooler. The rpm of the fan basicaly translates to noise and at 6300rpm your stock fan is topped out. The objective for aftermarket air coolers is to implement a larger fan(s) that spin at lower rpms, but move the same or more air than the stock cooler fan you have. This is to reduce the amount of noise as much as possible.


Check the AMD site for those details. If it is stock you can find that info easy.
Don't worry about the temp.

If you do worry, get a third party cooler for lower temps.
 
Honestly i want to run my cpu fan at full speed.
at temperature 55-61 cpu fan run at 5800 - 6300 rpm but it run at only when cpu temperature is near 60.c even i have turn off smart fan control in bios it should run at highest rpm when cpu is cool why it don't.
 


CPUs typcially can handle upwards of 90-100'C before they shut down. They will start to lose performance in the 85-90'C range. 60'C is perfectly fine, especially for a stock cooler. If you want anything lower then you will need to get a good air cooler or liquid cooler. The rpm of the fan basicaly translates to noise and at 6300rpm your stock fan is topped out. The objective for aftermarket air coolers is to implement a larger fan(s) that spin at lower rpms, but move the same or more air than the stock cooler fan you have. This is to reduce the amount of noise as much as possible.
 
Solution