Since I haven't been able to find any of these things, I've decided to design one...
I'll post schematics and such when I'm done... it looks to be pretty easy, thus far - following specs/suggestions for getting the die-temp from AMD's documentation.
Frequency will be regulated (per-fan) by a trimmer potentiomenter (variable resistor.. tuned by a screw) - this way, you can adjust the frequency of the pulse so the fan won't make any clicks or whining noises. Thermalcouple will read the core temp, and adjust the duty cycle of the pulses.
I was going to read the voltage directly off of the pins on the processor, but then each processor is different, and you run the gambit of pulling too much current and frying your chip/mobo. Thermalcouple is more accurate, anyway.
The 'hard' part will be in determining the target temps and so-on... but that'll come from some tweaking and asking around anandtech.
As of right now, I'm moving software platforms... PSpice is win32 only - trying to get gEDA built and installed on my machine.
Comments/Suggestions are welcome.
I'll post schematics and such when I'm done... it looks to be pretty easy, thus far - following specs/suggestions for getting the die-temp from AMD's documentation.
Frequency will be regulated (per-fan) by a trimmer potentiomenter (variable resistor.. tuned by a screw) - this way, you can adjust the frequency of the pulse so the fan won't make any clicks or whining noises. Thermalcouple will read the core temp, and adjust the duty cycle of the pulses.
I was going to read the voltage directly off of the pins on the processor, but then each processor is different, and you run the gambit of pulling too much current and frying your chip/mobo. Thermalcouple is more accurate, anyway.
The 'hard' part will be in determining the target temps and so-on... but that'll come from some tweaking and asking around anandtech.
As of right now, I'm moving software platforms... PSpice is win32 only - trying to get gEDA built and installed on my machine.
Comments/Suggestions are welcome.