Skip to content

lefth/fan-speed-control

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

7 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

fan-speed-control

Arduino speed control for a four-wire desktop computer fan. Good for magnetic stirrers.

Fan controls

Four-wire computer fans have speed controlled by PWM applied to one of the wires. The wire is normally pulled up to 5-12 V, and to reduce the fan speed, we should pull it down. Pulling it down all the time would tell the fan to turn at its lowest speed. Leaving it high lets the fan run at max speed. If we use PWM to pull it down some of the time, the duty cycle will determine the fan's speed. Note that you must use a transistor to pull the connection down, as the voltage sometimes goes much higher than an Anduino port can handle.

The fan may not be able to handle very high frequency PWM, so Arduino is advantageous over a faster dedicated PWM controller.

Usage

My circuit has the optional feature of using a momentary push button to change whether the fan is on. Connect one end of the button to Arduino and the other end to ground, so the button press pulls the pin down. If you don't need this, you can hook the fan up to a 12 V power supply directly.

I am using a 10 k potentiometer (as a voltage divider) to control the speed. Measure voltage from the pot's middle pin. If you want to use some other logic to determine the desired speed, rewrite the getChosenSpeed function.

My circuit uses two 2222A transistors, but you could use almost any transistor.

Why not use a 555 timer?

Since Arduino is popular with beginners, there are a lot of people that don't have a 555 timer. If you have it and know how to use it, use the 555! You may need to limit the frequency so it doesn't get so high the fan gets confused.

Use for magnetic stirrers

Magnetic stirrers are very easy to make with a computer fan, but people typically control their speed by limiting the voltage with a variable resistor. This works badly because they may not have enough torque to get started until they're at nearly full power. (And good luck trying to stir a thick liquid.) Using the built in speed control doesn't have that problem. However, operation is still limited by the lowest speed. My fan's minimum speed is probably still too fast to stir something very thick like honey.

Circuit

Circuit diagram

More info about 4-wire fans

I learned about the speed control in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKHww3qJbs8

About

Arduino speed control for a four-wire desktop computer fan. Good for magnetic stirrers.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages