I'm really wondering what the advantage is to using three-pin vs. four-pin fans. I've had nothing but problems with the three-pin case fans that came with my NZXT H630 and am ready to replace all of them with four-pin counterparts. Namely that, it seems, four-pinners will adjust their speed more accordingly to system / CPU temperature while three-pin fans don't have this service as well developed. Either way, all the fan headers on my mobo are four pin, so I would expect all good case fans to take advantage of it.
As an example, I purchased (and had to return) a Noctua D14 since it came with two three-pin fans split into a Y cable that attached to the CPU FAN motherboard header. After reading that the Y will cause the fans to constantly spin at the same speeds, I'm wondering why Noctua wouldn't include two four-pin fans to take advantage of PWM.
I'm looking to us a Silverstone CPF04 to control all my fans. Doesn't it make sense that fan speed be dictated by system load? I even considered purchasing an automatic Thermaltake fan controller, but, low and behold: all the connectors on it are three-pin and it doesn't connect to the SYSFAN header, but rather attaches to your CPU heatsink via a metallic clip. It seems too unreliable this way.
I might be missing something here, but why would any vendor make three-pin a choice over four?
As an example, I purchased (and had to return) a Noctua D14 since it came with two three-pin fans split into a Y cable that attached to the CPU FAN motherboard header. After reading that the Y will cause the fans to constantly spin at the same speeds, I'm wondering why Noctua wouldn't include two four-pin fans to take advantage of PWM.
I'm looking to us a Silverstone CPF04 to control all my fans. Doesn't it make sense that fan speed be dictated by system load? I even considered purchasing an automatic Thermaltake fan controller, but, low and behold: all the connectors on it are three-pin and it doesn't connect to the SYSFAN header, but rather attaches to your CPU heatsink via a metallic clip. It seems too unreliable this way.
I might be missing something here, but why would any vendor make three-pin a choice over four?