I have a question about what is going to happen with the fan speeds if I replace the original chipset fan with a different model.
I have DFI Infinity NF ULTRAII-M2 motherboard, the chipset fan is conected directly to the board thru 3 pin FF connector.
When chipset temperature is about 56 C the fan speed is about 4000 rpm. At higher temperatures (65+ C), the speed is more than 6000 rpm.
What I would like to know is what'll happen with the fan speeds if I replace the fan with some model other than original one. Here's one possibility. The specifications say 5000-5499 rpm. What does it mean? Does it mean the speed won't be lower than 5000 rpm even when the temperature is low enough to cool with the 3000 rpm?
I thought the fan speed is voltage controled and the motherboard only changes the voltage according to the chipset temperature. E.g.:
56 C --> 70% of voltage
60 C --> 80% of voltage
62 C --> 90% of voltage
65 C --> 100% of voltage
So if some fan has it's maximum speed 1500 rpm, at 56 C the speed would be 1500*0.7=1050 rpm. Is that correct or am I wrong?
For, I'd like to mount the HR-05 SLI/IFX heatsink (here's another image) and a bigger&slower fan. But I'd also like to preserve the automatic speed control - I don't want to just connect the fan thru molex connector.
I assume the fan has to have 3 pin FF conector (+12 V, GND, sense) and has to be designed for 12 and not 5 V but still wonder if I can be 100% sure the new fan would be electrically compatible with the motherboard's speed control. There was 12 V written on the fan's stick and that was the only way to determine the fan voltage, the voltage is not mentioned in the motherboard's manual.
Now I am not sure if I can mount the heatsink + 8 cm slower fan (instead of 4 cm) and still have the automatic speed regulation. If the maximum speed of 8 cm fan would be 1000 rpm, will it slow down to 700 rpm at 56 C? How I can be sure the power consumption won't be to high?



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