Paul wrote:
lid wrote:
The fan is making noise. I can stop it with a pencil. I sprayed a
jet of wd 40. It is a little more quiet. I think if I could get it
spinning faster and give it one more burst, it might hit the spot.
Ah, it's the power supply fan. I missed that bit.
The last power supply I opened up, the fan was
connectorized. But they don't have to be that way.
It's probably $0.02 cheaper to solder the
fan wires right to the PCB.
The fan speed is a function of temperature on
some of them.
You would need to replace the header inside the PSU
as a power source, with something else.
I'd rather open the supply up. *Don't* touch anything.
Identify whether the harness leading from the fan, is
on a removable connector or not (like a desktop computer
fan connector). Then, look for a replacement for
the thing.
The little LP3 style fan connector, has a locking
feature that makes it hard to release. You have to
lean the connector body a bit, to get it past
the tab when removing it. In the example here, the
tiny circuit board it plugs into, is probably
the fan speed control.
https://techreport.com/blog/14236/th...n-swap-of-2008
Paul