View Full Version : 12V computer fan
I have a question,I looked at the 12V
converter's 110v how do you hook it up'
strip the wire or what any one's oppion would be apresiated:
MegaOctane12
04-20-2006, 09:08 PM
The computer fan has a red and black wire, probally a yellow, this one controls the speed on the comp. You don't need to worry about it. Cut the red and black wires and connect the red wire to the stripped black adpater wire and connect the black fan wire to the black adapter wire. Depeding on the adapter you bought (if its a good one) you can have a shit load of fans with the one adapter without compromising the speed.
MisterSource
04-21-2006, 12:11 AM
Make sure you use the proper DC adapter. If you plug it straight into the wall, it's going to blow up.
Garden Knowm
04-21-2006, 01:27 AM
you mean fizzle... lol
the image reaper
04-21-2006, 05:06 AM
www.coolerguys.com is a computer parts place I buy from sometimes, ... I see they now have a 110-volt computer fan ... cheap enough, too ... if that helps eliminate steps ... :smokin:
the image reaper
04-21-2006, 05:08 AM
http://www.coolerguys.com/840556026389.html ... sorry to double-post, little stoned ... anyway, this is the 115-volt fan I was referring to, $18.95 .. :stoned:
altec3
04-25-2006, 09:49 PM
What i would do is take a trip to Good-Will, Value Village or some other second hand store and look around the electronics section for a 12v power adapter. I can usually find them for about 2 bucks. If you can't find one there I would go over to Radio Shack and grab one. Then all you do is take the wire that comes out of it, cut off the plug at the end, and wire the red wire to the wire that has a white stripe on it. If the wire isnt red or has no stripe look for something distinguishing, this is usually the positive. If you want to go all out you could take your adaptor in to radio shack and get the female connector that fits it and wire that in so you can plug your fan in without moving the adaptor or fan. Well hope that helps
The computer fan has a red and black wire, probally a yellow, this one controls the speed on the comp. You don't need to worry about it. Cut the red and black wires and connect the red wire to the stripped black adpater wire and connect the black fan wire to the black adapter wire. Depeding on the adapter you bought (if its a good one) you can have a shit load of fans with the one adapter without compromising the speed.
To do that it needs to be in parallel.
I took electronics and engineering at school.
cactusman23
04-26-2006, 01:39 AM
I got all my fans and adapters from goodwill
krustythfreakinclown
04-26-2006, 01:49 AM
Go to Radio Shack and they'll show you exactly what you need to have and what you need to do. If they show you something that you don't already have, then buy it and use it.
Thank's For all your tip's you have all
Been Helpful Thank's : Keg's
THINKGREEN420
04-26-2006, 07:52 PM
i have 2 12 v fans i took from an old tower of mine i read the posts about gettting the 12 v power adaptor but is then pluged in an outlet or can u use like a couple 9v batterys to power them?
MegaOctane12
04-26-2006, 09:22 PM
To do that it needs to be in parallel.
I took electronics and engineering at school.
What do you mean parallel? Not having all the fan wires mashed together?
altec3
04-27-2006, 01:26 AM
You could run it off of two nine volts if you wanted to, the only problem is thats 18 volts, which your fan may or may not run on. You would have to wire a 12 ohm, 3 watt resistor in to make it 12 volts but that would waste energy and cost money. Also the batteries will not last very long and it would get very expensive. If you wanted to run it on disposable batteries I would get 2 of those huge 6 volts as they will last much longer. By far the best way to go would be to get a 12v lawn mower/utility battery for 20 bucks at wal-mart. The only problem with that is you would have to charge it fairly often. If you bought this, http://www.siliconsolar.com/shop/catalog/12v-Solar-Battery-Charger-p-133.html or something like it you would keep the battery charged by solar power. Since the fan is a motor and motors drain batteries like no other I would highly suggest not using a battery. Well anyways hope that helps
turtle420
04-27-2006, 03:55 AM
What do you mean parallel? Not having all the fan wires mashed together?
Serial vs Parallel wiring.
The two AA batteries inside your remote control, are connected in "serial". Check them out. Follow the metal strips.
Parallel, would be... um, positive+positive+positive
Serial would be positive+negative+postivie+negative (<-- this doesn't make much sense, but I need to log-off... )
:) Peace dudes! :)
MegaOctane12
04-27-2006, 01:55 PM
Don't get what you mean at all sorry. I got one fan on the top end of the adapter wire and I add one further down and another further down e.t.c e.t.c. None of the fan wires touch and all are black to black and red to black with stripe.
altec3
04-27-2006, 07:26 PM
I googled a pic and this seems to explain it pretty well. Figure A is in series and Figure B is in parallel. Off of a 12v supply you would want to hook all your fans in parallel. This means that all the fans hook directly to the battery/adaptor and not to each other. If you wired two fans in series they would split the voltage giving each fan roughly 6 volts. Running in parallel uses more amps and will also drain your batteries faster.
MegaOctane12
04-27-2006, 08:02 PM
That explains it. I wouldn't have even considered wiring the fan wires like that its just common knowledge.
mordok
05-01-2006, 09:44 PM
around here, people give away old computers through a Freecycle network. some work, some don't. but if the computer's power supply is ok, you have a 5v and 12v power source. the size could be a problem. if you are already stripping a computer for fans, then consider keeping the power supply and hooking fans to it. the wire to the fans doesn't need to be very heavy, unless you run one line from the power supply to where the fans are being used and then running all the fans from this one line. then maybe 16 gauge or 14 gauge wire would help. i always keep power supplies and fans when i strip a computer that isn't worth fixing. there are power dividers that can split the output from one power supply lead to two drives or whatever and it wouldn't be hard to come up with the connectors to match the connectors on the power supply.
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