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Fan speed control program. Other then Speedfan

Joined
Apr 23, 2006
Messages
3,558 (0.51/day)
Location
Enschede, The Netherlands
System Name Lian Li Carbon fiber ed.
Processor Intel i5 2500k 4.6Ghz 24/7 Max OC 5Ghz
Motherboard Asrock Z68 Extreme3 Gen3
Cooling Swiftech blocks, 360 Xflow rad, Swiftech 120 rad, Liang with XSPC res/pump top.
Memory 8Gb Mushkin 1600Mhz 8-9-8-24
Video Card(s) Sapphire HD6950 2Gb
Storage OCZ Vertex 4 128 / Western Digital 160
Display(s) ASUS 25,5" wide VW266h
Power Supply Corsair HX620 modular
Software Windows 7 64
Hi.

Could somebody let me know if there is some other program then speedfan to
change my fan settings.
I have a Asrock 939 dual Sata and i think that Speedfan does not work with my board.
I can see the temps from everything but i can't control the fanspeeds, they are maxed out all the time.
 
Thanks.:rockout:

Great program. But i still can't change anything.:banghead:
 
Last edited:
Hi.

Could somebody let me know if there is some other program then speedfan to
change my fan settings.
I have a Asrock 939 dual Sata and i think that Speedfan does not work with my board.
I can see the temps from everything but i can't control the fanspeeds, they are maxed out all the time.
Can you adjust the fan speed on PC bios? If can't, your motherboard most probably have no control for fan speed. But, if you use original intel heatsync (for CPU), its fan is temperature controlled. It will automatically adjust fan speed according to heatsync temperature (or CPU temperature). I prefer this way, as it will release your CPU from extra work.

Regards,
Arto.
 
are you trying to control CPU fan/GPU fan/normal case fans?
 
get a hardware fan controller, much easier, much better, and much cooler looking.
 
agreed :D...but do those hardware ones just increase/decrease power going thru to the fans?
 
well they usually have a little bit of loss like mine (12v @11.7) but its hardly noticable. i have 2 80mm's on one channel 2 80mms on another channel and 4 leds on a third channel.
 
Hi Technicks,

Like others have suggested, the most likely reason for your inability to control your fans with SpeedFan is that your motherboard simply doesn't provide support for this (which is often the case).

If you want to make sure, the SpeedFan site provides a list of supported hardware, including what kind of monitoring and control the different motherboards provides. If you board is not listed here, Alfredo (the SpeedFan programmer) is usually more than happy to implement support for it, if you just send him a "repport" (see the SpeedFan "Info" tab).

While I'm sure you can get lots of hardware regulators, to my knowledge none of these will provide the same level of control as SpeedFan, most notably there is no easy way for such hardware to read the internal temperature sensor, present on most CPU's (and some GPU's). Since these provide a much quicker temperature response, you won't risk overheating due to the time-lack often seen with external sensors.

If you are lucky, you motherboard may have a connector for the SMBus, in which case you might be able to find a fan-speed regulator that will plug into this connector, which should then be detected by SpeedFan (though I've never tried this myself, so..?)

The reason I'm using SpeedFan is a bit more "geeky". My PC is VERY low-noise (less than 10db at 50cm = a person whispering in the other end of the room!) This is achieved by extensive use of watercooling in conjunction with a passive external radiator. Thus I use SpeedFan to turn on the large fan on my "Reserator" (the external radiator/reservoir) when one or more of my temperatures are high enough to warrant this. That way I only get the increased noise from this fan when I'm hardcore-gaming for prolonged periods (where the game sounds typically mask out the fan noise anyway).

If you want to make sure you get a board that have extensive support for fan-speed regulation and speed/temp monitoring, I can highly recommend Intels motherboards. Aside from typically having lots of fan-connectors as well as inputs for monitoring your PSU fan etc. They also have VERY high power-specefications for these connectors, allowing up to 25 Watt on some of them (typically the CPU fan is the highest rated one, with others being 18W and/or 10W). This will allow you to connect larger, high-performance fans and even several fans to a single output. Also, if you consider water-cooling, you will likely need the high power output to run the pump (at least I do).

Btw. I can highly recommend water-cooling (both your CPU and your GPU, possibly your RAM and chipset as well), as this is not only much more quiet (especially if you use a passive radiator) but it will also keep your hardware much cooler and it is almost impossible to overheat your hardware, even if your pump stops for extended periods (I can stop my pump for an hour without even reaching normal air-cooling temps!) Finally, water-cooling is MUCH cheaper, as all the components can be used for many years without getting filled with dust and dirt, nor will your case and hardware get covered in as much dust, due to the lower air-flow in the case.
 
Welcome to TPU :)

Nice post :D...heaps of good information ;)
 
you may have to enable some smartfan/cool n quiet option in the bios (or something about "automatic/auto fan controling). this will give the motherboard control with the fanspeed which will then be able to controled by speedfan.
 
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