how to power computer fan

Endur0xX

Well-Known Member
thank you all !! I will probably go the 12 volt adapter route unless Thorn3 can make his point with 2-3 sentences ... just way too much drinkin & smokin to read all of this for now!
 

Jakabok Botch

Well-Known Member
thank you all !! I will probably go the 12 volt adapter route unless Thorn3 can make his point with 2-3 sentences ... just way too much drinkin & smokin to read all of this for now!
honestly....thats your easiest route and cheapest just run to goodwill or savers or some shit get one for $1
 

Jakabok Botch

Well-Known Member
unless Thorn3 can make his point with 2-3 sentences ...



Hello all. New here. I ran across this thread and felt I needed to post some helpful information.......

....If a person plans to use a switch mode computer power supply to power computer fans or other hardware, it can be done. It is not extremely dangerous to modify them.There are no high value or capacity capacitors in them. As long as the unit is unplugged when working on it......
hows that????

Jakabok has it right. Don't shy away from working with something because you don't know anything about it. Everyone starts doing something for the first time. Nobody is born with the knowledge. So a person has to do some research. How much research is needed to properly construct a grow cabinet, then grow something interesting in it?.
 

Endur0xX

Well-Known Member
thank you all for your help. I used the link that raven gave me... 5 minutes of my time and I got the fans running.. just one question though, my adapter says output: 15VDC, does it mean 15 volts instead of 12, is that an issue? thanks again!
 

Weedotron

Member
In the long term, if you run a 12v fan off a 15v supply you'll fry it. You should change that asap, could be a fire hazard.

I once powered a computer fan off a phone charger and that worked pretty well
 

Thorn3

Member
Get a 12 volt power supply. If you want to know 'why'... read on.

A typical class 2 power supply, which is what a wall-wart type supply is... is unregulated. This means that the voltage coming out of it is not going to remain constant. It will change with line voltage (wall socket voltage) and the load applied to the power supply. These power supplies are designed with this in mind. If you buy a 12 volt power supply and read the voltage coming out of it with a meter, with (in this case) no fan attached, don't be surprised to see 15 or more volts. The power supply will experience what is called a 'voltage drop' when you apply a load to it. Any device attached to a power supply is a 'load'. The greater the resistance of the device, the more it loads down the power supply and thus the lower the actual voltage is going to be. All class 2 power supplies will read a higher voltage when unloaded, than is written on the housing. When an appropriate load is applied to the power supply, such as hooking up a fan to it... then the voltage will drop.

In the case of your 15 volt class 2 supply... the 'actual' voltage of that supply is going to more like 18 volts. When you apply a load to it, that voltage will drop to near 15 volts. Depending on the resistance of the load itself. If the load is very small... then the voltage drop will be less and you may still have more than 15 volts running through the device. Your fan may not like that for long. Computer fans are not like bathroom fans. They are DC, electronically controlled, three phase motors. The electronics in those fans may or may not handle the added voltage. Depends on the quality of the parts in the controller circuit. Better to use a class 2 supply that is meant for a 12 volt device.
 

buhitow

Member
Awesome, thanks to all of you nice people helping out. i got 3 12v fans, and i am almost sure one of my old chargers is 12v, i hope it also has enough amp.
i am sure the difficult part is going to be looking for it in the old stuff boxes xD
 

sso

Well-Known Member
i just went to a hardware store and got one of those 12vdc adapters you can buy to run those car appliances (whatever you can stick into the cigarette lighter in the car to get power for)at home (or vacationhome or something)

cut off the car cigarette lighter shaped thingy and put it to work.
 
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