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"
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