- Oct 27, 2004
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I have wondered of this thing before (almost two years ago) and I would like to know what you guys think about fan speeds:
Why is it that the newer CPU fans has a lower rpm than older fans? and that the lower the fan speed can lower the temperature of the CPU efficiently? I tried this and observed this on three CPU's, The Duron 900 has a stack fan with a speed of 7500+ RPM, The Athlon XP 1.5 has a 6300+ RPM, and the Duron 1.6Ghz has a fan speed of 2500-3000+ RPM.
I was using a 6300+ RPM fan (the fan is smaller and has lots of blades) for a Duron 1.6ghz temperature hits a maximum of 49-50 degrees. I tried replacing the fan with a 3000+ RPM fan (a little bit bigger and has less blades). at the same time I overclocked it to 1.8ghz. and surprisingly I saw the temperature at around 49 degrees!
Why is that the slower the fan the lower the temperature? I have been answered before that this could be due to fan design and size, but is it equivalent to say that when a fan is bigger and spins half the speed of a smaller fan the efficiency is the same? I was quite surprised that a fan speed of 50% less (the fan is slightly bigger and less blades though) can cool a processor much better that a fan that spins 50% faster (more blades and smaller).
Why is it that the newer CPU fans has a lower rpm than older fans? and that the lower the fan speed can lower the temperature of the CPU efficiently? I tried this and observed this on three CPU's, The Duron 900 has a stack fan with a speed of 7500+ RPM, The Athlon XP 1.5 has a 6300+ RPM, and the Duron 1.6Ghz has a fan speed of 2500-3000+ RPM.
I was using a 6300+ RPM fan (the fan is smaller and has lots of blades) for a Duron 1.6ghz temperature hits a maximum of 49-50 degrees. I tried replacing the fan with a 3000+ RPM fan (a little bit bigger and has less blades). at the same time I overclocked it to 1.8ghz. and surprisingly I saw the temperature at around 49 degrees!
Why is that the slower the fan the lower the temperature? I have been answered before that this could be due to fan design and size, but is it equivalent to say that when a fan is bigger and spins half the speed of a smaller fan the efficiency is the same? I was quite surprised that a fan speed of 50% less (the fan is slightly bigger and less blades though) can cool a processor much better that a fan that spins 50% faster (more blades and smaller).