Strange fan behaviour: The hotter the slower!

Hanky

Senior member
Dec 29, 2000
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I still have a little 50x50 Y.S. Tech fan on my relatively cheap Coolermaster HS (for a TB 800). I want to buy a better HSF soon but meanwhile I found that the fan shows some strange behaviour. After a cold boot when the system and the CPU are still cold the fan spins at ~4800 rpm but after heating up the system it slows down to ~4300 rpm. Could this be some general problem with the fan or maybe it's not even a problem but has to happen or is rpm measuring as inaccurate as temperature measuring?
 

KouklatheCat

Golden Member
Oct 23, 2000
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I would GUESS something like heat builds resistance or when the bearings in the fan get hot they expand. I dont have rpm monitoring on my fans, most of mine draw too much current for the MOBO headers.
 

Hanky

Senior member
Dec 29, 2000
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Maybe it has something to do with the kind of bearing...the Y.S. Tech fan is a two-ball bearing fan...on my modded GeForce I also have a 50x50 fan but it's a very high-quality sleeve bearing fan from Papst. This fan stays at the same speed (its "rpm-window" has a maximum size of 50 rpm) no matter how hot the GPU gets. Maybe Y.S. Tech just isn't as good as I always thought...
 

Supradude

Golden Member
Nov 3, 2000
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hm... just a hunch. but depending on your fan setup, you may be causing some weird turbulence and pressure systems inside your case which may introduce drag on your fans...
 

ericd

Senior member
Oct 8, 2000
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How many watts is you PSU. Maybe the amount of power being supplied to the fan through the header is dropping off??? Just a thought.

Eric
 

Hanky

Senior member
Dec 29, 2000
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My PSU is the 330 W model from Enermax (modded to be more silent), so I don't think it can't supply enough power because I don't have anything power-hungry in my system besides the GeForce and the TB800 but it should be able to handle them!
The suggestion with the turbulences is hard to prove or reject...all I can say is that my cooling setup is more or less standard: one front intake fan and one back outtake fan.