PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

p2b-d and antec sl400

 
 
William Katz
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      31st Dec 2003

About three weeks ago I upgraded the power supply in my computer to an
Antec SL400 (400 Watt). Everything is fine, except one minor quirk I
noticed. The power fan RPM is not detected in the BIOS (or ASUS Probe
v2.22.03).

Here are my specs:

ASUS P2B-D Rev. 1.06 (D01)
ACPI BIOS Revision 1014 Beta 003
512MB RAM (2x256MB SDRAM PC-100)
DUAL Pentium III 850Mhz Slot 1 CPU's (100Mhz FSB)


I have cpu #1 3-pin fan cable connected to the cpu fan connector on the
motherboard, cpu #2 3-pin fan cable connected to the chassis fan
connector, and the power fan cable from the SL400 connected to the power
fan connector.
The power fan cable on the SL400 has 2 wires on it (black and blue). Maybe
the power fan connector on the P2B-D must have 3 wires connected to it?

By the way, if I switch the power fan cable to the chassis fan connector,
that gives a proper RPM readout in the BIOS.

Does anyone have a solution to this minor problem?
TIA

--
William D. Katz "a good skier"

Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
P2B
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      31st Dec 2003


William Katz wrote:
> About three weeks ago I upgraded the power supply in my computer to an
> Antec SL400 (400 Watt). Everything is fine, except one minor quirk I
> noticed. The power fan RPM is not detected in the BIOS (or ASUS Probe
> v2.22.03).
>
> Here are my specs:
>
> ASUS P2B-D Rev. 1.06 (D01)
> ACPI BIOS Revision 1014 Beta 003
> 512MB RAM (2x256MB SDRAM PC-100)
> DUAL Pentium III 850Mhz Slot 1 CPU's (100Mhz FSB)
>
>
> I have cpu #1 3-pin fan cable connected to the cpu fan connector on the
> motherboard, cpu #2 3-pin fan cable connected to the chassis fan
> connector, and the power fan cable from the SL400 connected to the power
> fan connector.


Maybe your board is labelled differently to mine, but I would expect cpu
#2's fan to be connected to the power fan connector because it is much
closer to the CPU.

> The power fan cable on the SL400 has 2 wires on it (black and blue). Maybe
> the power fan connector on the P2B-D must have 3 wires connected to it?


Normally a monitored fan will have 3 wires: +12v input (red or yellow),
ground (black), and RPM sense output (blue or green). It sounds like the
power fan is supplied with +12v inside the power supply, and only has
ground and RPM sense externally. It's probably designed that way so the
fan runs without requiring a connection to the motherboard.

> By the way, if I switch the power fan cable to the chassis fan connector,
> that gives a proper RPM readout in the BIOS.


In that case either the RPM sense input for the power fan connector is
dead, or the connector orientation is backwards. Does the cpu #2 fan
give an RPM readout when connected to the power fan connector?

When looking at the board from the front (where drives connect), the
plastic locator tab on the power fan connector should be to the right of
the pins. First pin from the front is ground, middle pin is +12v, and
RPM sense is the rearmost pin.

HTH

P2B

 
Reply With Quote
 
DaveW
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      1st Jan 2004
Correct; it must have 3 wires.

--
DaveW



"William Katz" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> About three weeks ago I upgraded the power supply in my computer to an
> Antec SL400 (400 Watt). Everything is fine, except one minor quirk I
> noticed. The power fan RPM is not detected in the BIOS (or ASUS Probe
> v2.22.03).
>
> Here are my specs:
>
> ASUS P2B-D Rev. 1.06 (D01)
> ACPI BIOS Revision 1014 Beta 003
> 512MB RAM (2x256MB SDRAM PC-100)
> DUAL Pentium III 850Mhz Slot 1 CPU's (100Mhz FSB)
>
>
> I have cpu #1 3-pin fan cable connected to the cpu fan connector on the
> motherboard, cpu #2 3-pin fan cable connected to the chassis fan
> connector, and the power fan cable from the SL400 connected to the power
> fan connector.
> The power fan cable on the SL400 has 2 wires on it (black and blue). Maybe
> the power fan connector on the P2B-D must have 3 wires connected to it?
>
> By the way, if I switch the power fan cable to the chassis fan connector,
> that gives a proper RPM readout in the BIOS.
>
> Does anyone have a solution to this minor problem?
> TIA
>
> --
> William D. Katz "a good skier"
>
> Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
> Internet: (E-Mail Removed)



 
Reply With Quote
 
P2B
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      1st Jan 2004


P2B wrote:

>
>
> William Katz wrote:
>
>> About three weeks ago I upgraded the power supply in my computer to an
>> Antec SL400 (400 Watt). Everything is fine, except one minor quirk I
>> noticed. The power fan RPM is not detected in the BIOS (or ASUS Probe
>> v2.22.03).
>>
>> Here are my specs:
>>
>> ASUS P2B-D Rev. 1.06 (D01)
>> ACPI BIOS Revision 1014 Beta 003
>> 512MB RAM (2x256MB SDRAM PC-100)
>> DUAL Pentium III 850Mhz Slot 1 CPU's (100Mhz FSB)
>>
>>
>> I have cpu #1 3-pin fan cable connected to the cpu fan connector on
>> the motherboard, cpu #2 3-pin fan cable connected to the chassis fan
>> connector, and the power fan cable from the SL400 connected to the
>> power fan connector.

>
>
> Maybe your board is labelled differently to mine, but I would expect cpu
> #2's fan to be connected to the power fan connector because it is much
> closer to the CPU.
>
>> The power fan cable on the SL400 has 2 wires on it (black and blue).
>> Maybe the power fan connector on the P2B-D must have 3 wires connected
>> to it?

>
>
> Normally a monitored fan will have 3 wires: +12v input (red or yellow),
> ground (black), and RPM sense output (blue or green). It sounds like the
> power fan is supplied with +12v inside the power supply, and only has
> ground and RPM sense externally. It's probably designed that way so the
> fan runs without requiring a connection to the motherboard.
>
>> By the way, if I switch the power fan cable to the chassis fan
>> connector, that gives a proper RPM readout in the BIOS.

>
>
> In that case either the RPM sense input for the power fan connector is
> dead, or the connector orientation is backwards. Does the cpu #2 fan
> give an RPM readout when connected to the power fan connector?


I was messing around today and learned of a more probable cause of your
problem - the BIOS will not display fan speeds below a certain RPM,
instead it displays xxxxRPM [ERR] regardless of whether the fan is
spinning slowly or not at all. I suspect the BIOS 'tolerates' a slow
chassis fan but not a slow CPU or power fan, which would explain why
your power fan only registers when connected to the chassis fan
connector. I suggest ignoring the BIOS readings for now and checking
your fans with Motherboard Monitor, which will display the actual RPM at
all speeds and let you decide when the fans are too slow.

I had planned to determine what the BIOS speed thresholds are, but
unfortunately I was testing with a 2-wire fan I had just added an RPM
sensor to - and wired it wrong :-( Now my chassis fan sensor is dead and
I'll have to replace the sensor chip before I can proceed.

> When looking at the board from the front (where drives connect), the
> plastic locator tab on the power fan connector should be to the right of
> the pins. First pin from the front is ground, middle pin is +12v, and
> RPM sense is the rearmost pin.
>
> HTH
>
> P2B
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
William Katz
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2004
P2B <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> Maybe your board is labelled differently to mine, but I would expect cpu
> #2's fan to be connected to the power fan connector because it is much
> closer to the CPU.


Yeah, I had that originally before replacing the power supply. When I put
in the SL400, I attached the fan wire to the chassis fan connector on the
motherboard, and it reads the rpm speed, but gives that 'error in bios,
press f1 to bypass....' on system start, since like you said maybe it is
below the threshold for chassis speed. So, I switched it with cpu #2 fan.


>> The power fan cable on the SL400 has 2 wires on it (black and blue). Maybe
>> the power fan connector on the P2B-D must have 3 wires connected to it?

>
> Normally a monitored fan will have 3 wires: +12v input (red or yellow),
> ground (black), and RPM sense output (blue or green). It sounds like the
> power fan is supplied with +12v inside the power supply, and only has
> ground and RPM sense externally. It's probably designed that way so the
> fan runs without requiring a connection to the motherboard.
>
>> By the way, if I switch the power fan cable to the chassis fan connector,
>> that gives a proper RPM readout in the BIOS.

>
> In that case either the RPM sense input for the power fan connector is
> dead, or the connector orientation is backwards. Does the cpu #2 fan
> give an RPM readout when connected to the power fan connector?


Yes, all fan connectors (cpu#1, cpu#2, and antec sl400 power supply) give
rpm readouts, with the only exception that if the power fan is connected
to the power fan connector, there is no rpm readout "xxxxRPM [ERR]" in
bios. The fan works though, it is spinning. It shows around 1600 rpm
when connected to the chassis fan connector on the motherboard.
I guess i'll just install motherboard monitor and see if it shows up in
there. Thanks.


--
William D. Katz "a good skier"

Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
 
Reply With Quote
 
P2B
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2004


William Katz wrote:
[snip]

> Yes, all fan connectors (cpu#1, cpu#2, and antec sl400 power supply) give
> rpm readouts, with the only exception that if the power fan is connected
> to the power fan connector, there is no rpm readout "xxxxRPM [ERR]" in
> bios. The fan works though, it is spinning. It shows around 1600 rpm
> when connected to the chassis fan connector on the motherboard.
> I guess i'll just install motherboard monitor and see if it shows up in
> there. Thanks.


It will. I determined the BIOS thresholds for the chassis fan connector
are 1800 rpm (shows rpm [ERR] below 1800) and 1400 rpm (shows xxxx [ERR]
below 1400). I haven't determined the exact thresholds for the other
connectors yet, but they are definitely higher. Motherboard monitor
shows actual rpm no matter how slow it is :-)

 
Reply With Quote
 
William Katz
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      8th Jan 2004
P2B <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> It will. I determined the BIOS thresholds for the chassis fan connector
> are 1800 rpm (shows rpm [ERR] below 1800) and 1400 rpm (shows xxxx [ERR]
> below 1400). I haven't determined the exact thresholds for the other
> connectors yet, but they are definitely higher. Motherboard monitor
> shows actual rpm no matter how slow it is :-)


I'm guessing the threshold for the power fan connector is somewhere above
1600 rpm?

By the way, do you know where I can get a P2T thermal cable? I found one
for $9.50. If you think that's a fair price, I'll get that.


--
William D. Katz "a good skier"

Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
Internet: (E-Mail Removed)
 
Reply With Quote
 
P2B
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      9th Jan 2004


William Katz wrote:

> P2B <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
>>It will. I determined the BIOS thresholds for the chassis fan connector
>>are 1800 rpm (shows rpm [ERR] below 1800) and 1400 rpm (shows xxxx [ERR]
>>below 1400). I haven't determined the exact thresholds for the other
>>connectors yet, but they are definitely higher. Motherboard monitor
>>shows actual rpm no matter how slow it is :-)

>
>
> I'm guessing the threshold for the power fan connector is somewhere above
> 1600 rpm?


From vague memory it's 1800rpm, but I haven't gotten around to
verifying the exact thresholds yet.

> By the way, do you know where I can get a P2T thermal cable? I found one
> for $9.50. If you think that's a fair price, I'll get that.


You can make one using a 10K ohm thermistor and the 2-pin header from an
ATX reset or power switch for a dollar or two - just cut the leads from
the header to the required length, solder on the thermistor (doesn't
matter which way around) and insulate the connections with plastic
tubing (the heatshrink variety is preferred).

Alternatively, I have several homemade ones on the shelf because I had
to replace them with tiny axial-lead thermistors when I switched to S370
processors. Yours for $US4.00 each including postage, email me if you
want one.

P2B

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Antec Case w/ Antec trio - Fan Connections bern11 DIY PC 1 9th Oct 2007 11:58 AM
ANTEC P180 & ANTEC PHANTOM 500 the_fifo Computer Hardware 0 29th Sep 2005 07:43 PM
Antec NeoPower and Antec TP-II 480 differences? Phisherman DIY PC 9 26th Jul 2005 10:43 AM
Antec PSU Daniel P DIY PC 10 3rd May 2004 10:17 PM
400 watts enough? antec sl400 lucky DIY PC 7 27th Dec 2003 11:25 AM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:54 PM.