Tuesday, 1 November 2016

power supply - Undervolting PC Fan from 12V to 7V


I have a 3 pin 12 V Fan, rated at 2000 RPM max. Its nominal voltage is 12 V which will make it spin at full throttle. That's what is happening when I plug it in the motherboard. However I don't like that, because the fan is making a lot of noise. I would like to lower its speed to about half. I have figured out I should supply it with 7 V instead. There are methods online here, here and even a famous video on YouTube here demonstrating the procedure.


I've read a lot about this and I'm unsure about whether this is safe. I use a modern and pretty good and reliable 80 Plus PSU. So I'm skeptical now and I want to ask here to understand better. What we have to do is pretty much shown on the picture below.


enter image description here


Instead of supplying the fan with 12 V, using the yellow 12 V pin and the black ground pin from the Molex cable, we instead supply it with 12 V for VCC and 5 V for "ground". So the fan sees voltage difference of 12-5=7 V, but shouldn't there be a path to 0 V ground? This is the part where I'm confused.



Is this secure, is this possible?



Answer



This is not a great solution. The 5V rail is not intended to sink current in most multi-output power supplies, and it may not be able to do that effectively. It may do weird things like cause the 5V line to float up to a higher voltage or even damage something.


A more solid solution would be to use a DC-DC converter to step the 12V down efficiently. You can get them cheap on Amazon.


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