bongblasts
Well-Known Member
How do i power these computer fans? Any ideas homies?
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got a pic? and where did you get it?Since I only use my comp fans to remove light heat. I connected them to a solar panel. And the light produces the energy for the panel.
glad to help have fun and keep on tokingi got the fan working now, i took a old phone charger, thanks man!
You can use a wall wart, those bulky dc converters you plug in the wall for most smaller things these days... Chop the connector off, ignore the blue wire, and connect the red and black wires to the wall wart wires. One way will work, every other way will do nothing except maybe render the speed monitor blue line useless which you will never need anyway. You can't really hurt it as long as you aren't feeding over 12v.
9v-12v will do but they're probably 12v. If you want them to run quieter a lower voltage will slow them down just don't try below about 9v or they may not start up when plugged in.
Add the amperage of however many fans you want to use and if it's not too high you can run a few fans off one supply. Dc power won't hurt you either, as long as it says 12v dc output on the wall wart go ahead and play with it until you get it.
You can even power them off a 9v battery, just to be sure they're working and you have the right power wires.
If you want to use the 16v laptop supply it would work very well and power anywhere from 1 to 3 of those fans, they're a bit high wattage actually for computer fans but you would need to add a resistor to drop the voltage. I suggest 200ohm 5w as a good place to start, it'll cost $1 or something stupid, but that's just a guess and might make them run a little slower than you want.
Rather than a resistor a potentiometer would let you adjust the voltage if you find one rated for 20v+ and 5w+. A light dimmer for example made for 120v wall switch plates would work easily and you may have a spare old one around the house or can pick one up for pretty cheap.
They would be ok on 16v for a while, not sure how long, but adjust the speed down to 3/4 speed with the light dimmer and you'll be good long term because that's 12v.
I'd use both a 50ohm 5w resistor and a light dimmer so they could never go over 12v and you could use full speed on the dimmer or adjust down for silence, or just make sure you never turn the dimmer up too much, set a physical limiter on the knob or something so you never have to worry about it.