Three-wire and four-wire CPU fans, what's the difference?
What is the difference between 3-Wire and 4-Wire CPU cooling fans?
Of course, the obvious answer is “1 Wire!” :-)
cpu fan cooling chassis
add a comment |
What is the difference between 3-Wire and 4-Wire CPU cooling fans?
Of course, the obvious answer is “1 Wire!” :-)
cpu fan cooling chassis
2
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
1
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41
add a comment |
What is the difference between 3-Wire and 4-Wire CPU cooling fans?
Of course, the obvious answer is “1 Wire!” :-)
cpu fan cooling chassis
What is the difference between 3-Wire and 4-Wire CPU cooling fans?
Of course, the obvious answer is “1 Wire!” :-)
cpu fan cooling chassis
cpu fan cooling chassis
edited Sep 22 '16 at 21:02
RockPaperLizard
asked Sep 20 '16 at 1:19
RockPaperLizardRockPaperLizard
3,096133571
3,096133571
2
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
1
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41
add a comment |
2
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
1
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41
2
2
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
1
1
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Basic Differences
A three pin connector is basically power (5/12 volt), ground, and signal. The signal wire measures how fast the fan is moving without any controls for the fan speed. With this type, fan speed is typically controlled by increasing or decreasing the voltage over the power wire.
A four pin connector is a little different than the three pin connector as it has the extra [fourth] wire for control to send a signal to the fan which likely has a chip on it that tells it to slow down or speed up in addition to the other wires just as the three pin connector has.
Three Wire and Four Wire Fan Connectors
Chassis and processor fans use either a three-wire or four-wire
connector. The three-wire connectors are for small chassis fans with
lower power consumption. The four-wire connectors are for processor
fans with higher power consumption.
Three-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Fan header pinouts
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: N/A
Three-wire fan support: N/A
Note: When connecting a three-wire fan to a four-pin fan header, the fan is always on; there is no fan control
Four-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Four-wire fan connecting to a three-pin fan header
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: 4
Three-wire fan support: FAN_CONTROL
source
add a comment |
What author failed to mention is how speed is controlled with 4pin fans. They are also called PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) and require compatible control from motherboard and it's BIOS and not all the 4 pin MB connectors are true PWM.
Just knowing what PWM stands for should say everything about the way it works.
Basically, pulses of power are sent to the fan at various frequencies and so average power it receives determine amount of power they can produce and air resistance slows it down. Signal wire tells BIOS exact RPM and so it "knows" how fast pulses are sent to the fan.
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
add a comment |
A three wire fan reports its speed. Add a fourth wire, and the fan's speed can be varied by the motherboard.
The simplest PC fan requires two wires. The red wire provides power (+12 VDC), the black wire is ground (0 V). Applying power to will start the fan running full speed. If a modern fan's blades are stopped, the fan's drive circuitry interrupts power to the fan motor, then retries starting the fan periodically. This prevents the fan from overheating, resulting in a burned out fan (and a potential fire - and keeps the manufacturer from achieving CE/UL/CSA/TUV certification). You can try this by stopping a running fan, then letting it go. If, after you free the fan blades, the fan doesn't start for a moment, you have this modern kind of fan.
A three wire fan adds a tachometer output to the two wire fan. The yellow wire pulses an output voltage twice per fan revolution. With the fan spinning at 6000 RPM, you would measure a 200 Hz pulse rate (6000 rev/min / 60 s * 2 pulses/rev = 200 pulses/sec). Some PC motherboards monitor this input. In the case of fan failure, the motherboard can send an alert (beeper, message to the OS, etc.), or take action directly, like slow the CPU or even shut down the system.
Add a fourth wire to control the fan's speed. The fourth wire operates similarly to the third wire, but in reverse: this wire controls the fan speed. Intel created a wiring standard for this fan, including the connector type, pin positions, and wire color code. I haven't cited the Intel standard here, but it is widely reported to be: Black - 0 V, Yellow 12 V, Green - Tachometer output, Blue - PWM speed control input.
The fan's speed is controlled by pulsing the voltage on the fourth wire. This wire does not power the fan. The frequency of the pulsed signal changes the speed of the fan. This common method of controlling an analog device (fan, light, heater) with a digital control is called pulse width modulation, or PWM.
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Basic Differences
A three pin connector is basically power (5/12 volt), ground, and signal. The signal wire measures how fast the fan is moving without any controls for the fan speed. With this type, fan speed is typically controlled by increasing or decreasing the voltage over the power wire.
A four pin connector is a little different than the three pin connector as it has the extra [fourth] wire for control to send a signal to the fan which likely has a chip on it that tells it to slow down or speed up in addition to the other wires just as the three pin connector has.
Three Wire and Four Wire Fan Connectors
Chassis and processor fans use either a three-wire or four-wire
connector. The three-wire connectors are for small chassis fans with
lower power consumption. The four-wire connectors are for processor
fans with higher power consumption.
Three-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Fan header pinouts
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: N/A
Three-wire fan support: N/A
Note: When connecting a three-wire fan to a four-pin fan header, the fan is always on; there is no fan control
Four-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Four-wire fan connecting to a three-pin fan header
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: 4
Three-wire fan support: FAN_CONTROL
source
add a comment |
Basic Differences
A three pin connector is basically power (5/12 volt), ground, and signal. The signal wire measures how fast the fan is moving without any controls for the fan speed. With this type, fan speed is typically controlled by increasing or decreasing the voltage over the power wire.
A four pin connector is a little different than the three pin connector as it has the extra [fourth] wire for control to send a signal to the fan which likely has a chip on it that tells it to slow down or speed up in addition to the other wires just as the three pin connector has.
Three Wire and Four Wire Fan Connectors
Chassis and processor fans use either a three-wire or four-wire
connector. The three-wire connectors are for small chassis fans with
lower power consumption. The four-wire connectors are for processor
fans with higher power consumption.
Three-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Fan header pinouts
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: N/A
Three-wire fan support: N/A
Note: When connecting a three-wire fan to a four-pin fan header, the fan is always on; there is no fan control
Four-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Four-wire fan connecting to a three-pin fan header
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: 4
Three-wire fan support: FAN_CONTROL
source
add a comment |
Basic Differences
A three pin connector is basically power (5/12 volt), ground, and signal. The signal wire measures how fast the fan is moving without any controls for the fan speed. With this type, fan speed is typically controlled by increasing or decreasing the voltage over the power wire.
A four pin connector is a little different than the three pin connector as it has the extra [fourth] wire for control to send a signal to the fan which likely has a chip on it that tells it to slow down or speed up in addition to the other wires just as the three pin connector has.
Three Wire and Four Wire Fan Connectors
Chassis and processor fans use either a three-wire or four-wire
connector. The three-wire connectors are for small chassis fans with
lower power consumption. The four-wire connectors are for processor
fans with higher power consumption.
Three-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Fan header pinouts
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: N/A
Three-wire fan support: N/A
Note: When connecting a three-wire fan to a four-pin fan header, the fan is always on; there is no fan control
Four-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Four-wire fan connecting to a three-pin fan header
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: 4
Three-wire fan support: FAN_CONTROL
source
Basic Differences
A three pin connector is basically power (5/12 volt), ground, and signal. The signal wire measures how fast the fan is moving without any controls for the fan speed. With this type, fan speed is typically controlled by increasing or decreasing the voltage over the power wire.
A four pin connector is a little different than the three pin connector as it has the extra [fourth] wire for control to send a signal to the fan which likely has a chip on it that tells it to slow down or speed up in addition to the other wires just as the three pin connector has.
Three Wire and Four Wire Fan Connectors
Chassis and processor fans use either a three-wire or four-wire
connector. The three-wire connectors are for small chassis fans with
lower power consumption. The four-wire connectors are for processor
fans with higher power consumption.
Three-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Fan header pinouts
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: N/A
Three-wire fan support: N/A
Note: When connecting a three-wire fan to a four-pin fan header, the fan is always on; there is no fan control
Four-wire fan connecting to a four-pin fan header
Four-wire fan connecting to a three-pin fan header
Pin: 1
Three-wire fan support: Ground
Pin: 2
Three-wire fan support: 12 V
Pin: 3
Three-wire fan support: FAN_TACH
Pin: 4
Three-wire fan support: FAN_CONTROL
source
edited Sep 20 '16 at 3:04
answered Sep 20 '16 at 2:53
Pimp Juice ITPimp Juice IT
23.9k113973
23.9k113973
add a comment |
add a comment |
What author failed to mention is how speed is controlled with 4pin fans. They are also called PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) and require compatible control from motherboard and it's BIOS and not all the 4 pin MB connectors are true PWM.
Just knowing what PWM stands for should say everything about the way it works.
Basically, pulses of power are sent to the fan at various frequencies and so average power it receives determine amount of power they can produce and air resistance slows it down. Signal wire tells BIOS exact RPM and so it "knows" how fast pulses are sent to the fan.
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
add a comment |
What author failed to mention is how speed is controlled with 4pin fans. They are also called PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) and require compatible control from motherboard and it's BIOS and not all the 4 pin MB connectors are true PWM.
Just knowing what PWM stands for should say everything about the way it works.
Basically, pulses of power are sent to the fan at various frequencies and so average power it receives determine amount of power they can produce and air resistance slows it down. Signal wire tells BIOS exact RPM and so it "knows" how fast pulses are sent to the fan.
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
add a comment |
What author failed to mention is how speed is controlled with 4pin fans. They are also called PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) and require compatible control from motherboard and it's BIOS and not all the 4 pin MB connectors are true PWM.
Just knowing what PWM stands for should say everything about the way it works.
Basically, pulses of power are sent to the fan at various frequencies and so average power it receives determine amount of power they can produce and air resistance slows it down. Signal wire tells BIOS exact RPM and so it "knows" how fast pulses are sent to the fan.
What author failed to mention is how speed is controlled with 4pin fans. They are also called PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) and require compatible control from motherboard and it's BIOS and not all the 4 pin MB connectors are true PWM.
Just knowing what PWM stands for should say everything about the way it works.
Basically, pulses of power are sent to the fan at various frequencies and so average power it receives determine amount of power they can produce and air resistance slows it down. Signal wire tells BIOS exact RPM and so it "knows" how fast pulses are sent to the fan.
answered Sep 28 '16 at 6:09
Lukic MikeLukic Mike
411
411
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
add a comment |
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
Good info, thank you! And welcome to SuperUser!
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 28 '16 at 6:32
add a comment |
A three wire fan reports its speed. Add a fourth wire, and the fan's speed can be varied by the motherboard.
The simplest PC fan requires two wires. The red wire provides power (+12 VDC), the black wire is ground (0 V). Applying power to will start the fan running full speed. If a modern fan's blades are stopped, the fan's drive circuitry interrupts power to the fan motor, then retries starting the fan periodically. This prevents the fan from overheating, resulting in a burned out fan (and a potential fire - and keeps the manufacturer from achieving CE/UL/CSA/TUV certification). You can try this by stopping a running fan, then letting it go. If, after you free the fan blades, the fan doesn't start for a moment, you have this modern kind of fan.
A three wire fan adds a tachometer output to the two wire fan. The yellow wire pulses an output voltage twice per fan revolution. With the fan spinning at 6000 RPM, you would measure a 200 Hz pulse rate (6000 rev/min / 60 s * 2 pulses/rev = 200 pulses/sec). Some PC motherboards monitor this input. In the case of fan failure, the motherboard can send an alert (beeper, message to the OS, etc.), or take action directly, like slow the CPU or even shut down the system.
Add a fourth wire to control the fan's speed. The fourth wire operates similarly to the third wire, but in reverse: this wire controls the fan speed. Intel created a wiring standard for this fan, including the connector type, pin positions, and wire color code. I haven't cited the Intel standard here, but it is widely reported to be: Black - 0 V, Yellow 12 V, Green - Tachometer output, Blue - PWM speed control input.
The fan's speed is controlled by pulsing the voltage on the fourth wire. This wire does not power the fan. The frequency of the pulsed signal changes the speed of the fan. This common method of controlling an analog device (fan, light, heater) with a digital control is called pulse width modulation, or PWM.
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
add a comment |
A three wire fan reports its speed. Add a fourth wire, and the fan's speed can be varied by the motherboard.
The simplest PC fan requires two wires. The red wire provides power (+12 VDC), the black wire is ground (0 V). Applying power to will start the fan running full speed. If a modern fan's blades are stopped, the fan's drive circuitry interrupts power to the fan motor, then retries starting the fan periodically. This prevents the fan from overheating, resulting in a burned out fan (and a potential fire - and keeps the manufacturer from achieving CE/UL/CSA/TUV certification). You can try this by stopping a running fan, then letting it go. If, after you free the fan blades, the fan doesn't start for a moment, you have this modern kind of fan.
A three wire fan adds a tachometer output to the two wire fan. The yellow wire pulses an output voltage twice per fan revolution. With the fan spinning at 6000 RPM, you would measure a 200 Hz pulse rate (6000 rev/min / 60 s * 2 pulses/rev = 200 pulses/sec). Some PC motherboards monitor this input. In the case of fan failure, the motherboard can send an alert (beeper, message to the OS, etc.), or take action directly, like slow the CPU or even shut down the system.
Add a fourth wire to control the fan's speed. The fourth wire operates similarly to the third wire, but in reverse: this wire controls the fan speed. Intel created a wiring standard for this fan, including the connector type, pin positions, and wire color code. I haven't cited the Intel standard here, but it is widely reported to be: Black - 0 V, Yellow 12 V, Green - Tachometer output, Blue - PWM speed control input.
The fan's speed is controlled by pulsing the voltage on the fourth wire. This wire does not power the fan. The frequency of the pulsed signal changes the speed of the fan. This common method of controlling an analog device (fan, light, heater) with a digital control is called pulse width modulation, or PWM.
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
add a comment |
A three wire fan reports its speed. Add a fourth wire, and the fan's speed can be varied by the motherboard.
The simplest PC fan requires two wires. The red wire provides power (+12 VDC), the black wire is ground (0 V). Applying power to will start the fan running full speed. If a modern fan's blades are stopped, the fan's drive circuitry interrupts power to the fan motor, then retries starting the fan periodically. This prevents the fan from overheating, resulting in a burned out fan (and a potential fire - and keeps the manufacturer from achieving CE/UL/CSA/TUV certification). You can try this by stopping a running fan, then letting it go. If, after you free the fan blades, the fan doesn't start for a moment, you have this modern kind of fan.
A three wire fan adds a tachometer output to the two wire fan. The yellow wire pulses an output voltage twice per fan revolution. With the fan spinning at 6000 RPM, you would measure a 200 Hz pulse rate (6000 rev/min / 60 s * 2 pulses/rev = 200 pulses/sec). Some PC motherboards monitor this input. In the case of fan failure, the motherboard can send an alert (beeper, message to the OS, etc.), or take action directly, like slow the CPU or even shut down the system.
Add a fourth wire to control the fan's speed. The fourth wire operates similarly to the third wire, but in reverse: this wire controls the fan speed. Intel created a wiring standard for this fan, including the connector type, pin positions, and wire color code. I haven't cited the Intel standard here, but it is widely reported to be: Black - 0 V, Yellow 12 V, Green - Tachometer output, Blue - PWM speed control input.
The fan's speed is controlled by pulsing the voltage on the fourth wire. This wire does not power the fan. The frequency of the pulsed signal changes the speed of the fan. This common method of controlling an analog device (fan, light, heater) with a digital control is called pulse width modulation, or PWM.
A three wire fan reports its speed. Add a fourth wire, and the fan's speed can be varied by the motherboard.
The simplest PC fan requires two wires. The red wire provides power (+12 VDC), the black wire is ground (0 V). Applying power to will start the fan running full speed. If a modern fan's blades are stopped, the fan's drive circuitry interrupts power to the fan motor, then retries starting the fan periodically. This prevents the fan from overheating, resulting in a burned out fan (and a potential fire - and keeps the manufacturer from achieving CE/UL/CSA/TUV certification). You can try this by stopping a running fan, then letting it go. If, after you free the fan blades, the fan doesn't start for a moment, you have this modern kind of fan.
A three wire fan adds a tachometer output to the two wire fan. The yellow wire pulses an output voltage twice per fan revolution. With the fan spinning at 6000 RPM, you would measure a 200 Hz pulse rate (6000 rev/min / 60 s * 2 pulses/rev = 200 pulses/sec). Some PC motherboards monitor this input. In the case of fan failure, the motherboard can send an alert (beeper, message to the OS, etc.), or take action directly, like slow the CPU or even shut down the system.
Add a fourth wire to control the fan's speed. The fourth wire operates similarly to the third wire, but in reverse: this wire controls the fan speed. Intel created a wiring standard for this fan, including the connector type, pin positions, and wire color code. I haven't cited the Intel standard here, but it is widely reported to be: Black - 0 V, Yellow 12 V, Green - Tachometer output, Blue - PWM speed control input.
The fan's speed is controlled by pulsing the voltage on the fourth wire. This wire does not power the fan. The frequency of the pulsed signal changes the speed of the fan. This common method of controlling an analog device (fan, light, heater) with a digital control is called pulse width modulation, or PWM.
edited Jan 8 at 3:50
answered Nov 13 '18 at 22:10
ndemarcondemarco
485
485
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
add a comment |
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
1
1
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
You've provided an outstanding answer! Thank you!
– RockPaperLizard
Nov 13 '18 at 22:31
add a comment |
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2
The one wire is a control wire, allows the fan, to be set to a certain RPM. What did your research say was the difference?
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 1:20
@Ramhound Thanks. So that would mean that all 3-Wire fans would be unispeed? I'll have to double check, but I think I've seen some laptops with variable speed fans that only have 3 wires.
– RockPaperLizard
Sep 20 '16 at 1:23
I came here just to see the bonus answer :D
– jiggunjer
Sep 20 '16 at 1:37
@RockPaperLizard It does not mean that. That fan likely was connected to a fan controller or tomshardware.com/answers/id-2205716/…
– Ramhound
Sep 20 '16 at 2:03
1
@MagicallyDelicous Sure! Thank you! :)
– RockPaperLizard
Mar 20 '17 at 5:41