On 06/27/2012 12:42 AM, Chris Tofu wrote:
So in laymans terms you vary the speed by
narrowing or widening the
pulses delivered on the positive lead (duty cycle). A steady 12vdc
and you get max air flow/speed? The tach lead is registered by
something on the mobo, and otherwise has nothing to do with the
rotation of the blades?
This is usually the case, yes. Visualize PWM...perform
an integration
over several cycles, to take the area under the curve. The energy
delivered to the load varies with the pulse width. But the switching
devices (usually MOSFETs) are going from cutoff to saturation and back,
never operating in active mode for more than a few microseconds at a
time, and so dissipating very little power, thus running VERY efficiently.
Many Sun systems drive their fans this way. Actually many high-end
server systems from many manufacturers drive their fans this way, as
does some PC hardware. It's very common.
-Dave
features a PIC based Fan Speed controller (see front cover on link) that
discusses this but I am sure the same info is available freely on the
net elsewehere. If you are stuck I can scan the apposite portion of the
article..
--
Dave Wade G4UGM
Illegitimi Non Carborundum