I can give you some support with pictures:
The R4 has on the backside the labeling:
I’ve made the adapter using this cable and a 4 pins connector (don’t forget to check required pins). To remove the 3 pins connector of the cable I’ve used the pins as the thin object in the image below.
Hello Oli,
I think you know now what the difference between a PWM and Voltage controlled fan is …
And Banana PI drop away “RPM Speed Signal” pin on the R4 board. That also brings me in some trouble my first time!
You can inform you at R3 about equal topics - for example:
→ there is were i made my first steps :see no evil:. But there are more R3 fan chats …
One of your questions was how to get 3,3 voltage?
The 26 Pin GPIO header delivers that by default:
→ hoping that a fan do’s not have to much amps for the task!I had the same thinking like you.
Yes, i knew that before my initial posting. But the schematics clearly states “PWM” and not “Voltage controlled”. @TheServer201 mentioned that the 3rd wire of the R4 is indeed pwm, but there seems to be nearly no fans that by default have this layout. I will read further today when i am back from the meeting now.
Unfortunately, it would be better to have 3.5-3.7v, i assume thats the sweet spot (not hearable and max. air flow), not sure if 3.3v would be enough. But i will test that today with gpio and 3.3v as i assume, thats the easiest to achieve compared to creating again jst connectors … i am too old for such small stuff
One noctua requires 0.4A. And i know now what my “goal” is: one fan should be fixed at ~3.6v for the sfp ports (but will try it with 3.3v today) and the other controlled by pwm (if possible) or also at ~3.6v. Do you know whats the max. wattage is of the gpio pins? Can the 3.3v handle 0.8A?
@TheServer201 thanks i will read this in about 7h and probably ask some more questions Can you maybe share a picture of your R4 where your fan is located?
The pwm pin just pwm’s 3.3v at 2A, according to schematic. You can connect any load that can operate with these levels.
The mosfet is hooked up differently, so no 2A switching…
So you would need a mosfet to drive a 2 or 3 wire standard fan.
the sfp fan is now working like a charm @3.3v thanks @Lorem_amicus , but i noticed something wierd… when i lay down the fan on the sfp cage, i am somehow unable to get an ip. When i let it “float” a bit (e.g. use the antenna cable to push the fan a bit over the sfp cage) it works like a charm. Anyone an idea what could cause that?
I was planning to use some heat absorber tape to tigthen the fan to the sfp cage, but when i dont get a connection anymore… its a bit useless
small measurements (wip):
The noctua was laying on the oem fan so not a real comparison, guess @4v and on a good heat sink it would produce way better results
@TheServer201 what do you use on the cpu? do you use the same heatsink like i do or do you have something else? Can you share a bit information about the pwm-signal-adapter you built?
Not at home but I can take pictures sunday. I’m using this heatsink over the CPU and this one over the SFP+ cages. I’ve set the fan to be at the center of the top plate (see image). Since I have a PWM fan my adapter looks like the cable that I have linked in my last post and doesn’t contains anything more than wires and connectors.
Shipping is nearly 20 EUR for the CPU heat sink :X
Any idea how to get that to germany or switzerland without paying that much? Or any alternative?
Shipping is free for orders above 50 EUR (I brought along some ic for other projects). Finding a heatsink without a fan that covers the whole 50x50 square is really hard and even this one is not perfect (the distance between the holes should be 59 / sqrt(2) ~ 41.719mm whereas this have 43mm).
Had the same issue with digikey for wifi module, ESP gateway and others. They don’t like to handle small personal orders hence the high shipping cost I guess and the free shipping above 50€.
So best would be to order a slightly bigger heatsink, those special spring screws and drill the holes in the correct distance myself?
Thats what i am thinking now too
Here are the photos. The top is not yet finished the mounting holes doesn’t work with the Noctua NA-AV1, the fan wire is a bit too much bend and the uart adapter cannot be secured with double side tape yet.
Oh thats neat. The FAN is running all the time @5V i guess, but as its a 5v noctua fan (92mm or 80mm?), it probably is not noticeable? Thanks for the picture. When my perforated top arrives, and when i am finished with the FAN setup, i will post a pic too
It is a 80mm fan and yes it run on 5V but with the PWM it is never spinning at 100%.
How did you connect the pwm signal from the R4 (PH-3PIN?) to the noctua?
I have no problem in buying a pwm fan if that works. Where do you get the pwm signal from?
From the 3 pins connector which has 5V GND and PWM.
what was the size for sfp heatsink???