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#1
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What's SYS_FAN?
Just installed new Gigabyte GA-K8NSC-939 m/b. It has 3 fan connectors on
it: CPU_FAN - connected NB_FAN (chipset) - connected SYS_FAN - ? Don't know what this is and m/b manual just says it should be connected. Does it mean a case fan? If so I have a case fan which connects to PSU via standard Molex connector. PC appears to be working OK, have checked temps. and voltages etc. -- Kenny Cargill |
#2
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On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 22:53:41 +0100, Kenny wrote:
Just installed new Gigabyte GA-K8NSC-939 m/b. It has 3 fan connectors on it: CPU_FAN - connected NB_FAN (chipset) - connected SYS_FAN - ? Don't know what this is and m/b manual just says it should be connected. Does it mean a case fan? If so I have a case fan which connects to PSU via standard Molex connector. PC appears to be working OK, have checked temps. and voltages etc. Thats where you connect your case fan if you want to control the speed in some software, otherwise you can leave it connected on your psu, it doesn't make no diference to your pc ! |
#3
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"Nikonja" wrote in message news On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 22:53:41 +0100, Kenny wrote: Just installed new Gigabyte GA-K8NSC-939 m/b. It has 3 fan connectors on it: CPU_FAN - connected NB_FAN (chipset) - connected SYS_FAN - ? Don't know what this is and m/b manual just says it should be connected. Does it mean a case fan? If so I have a case fan which connects to PSU via standard Molex connector. PC appears to be working OK, have checked temps. and voltages etc. Thats where you connect your case fan if you want to control the speed in some software, otherwise you can leave it connected on your psu, it doesn't make no diference to your pc ! Except the fact that if you connect it to the system Fan connector on the motherboard you can monitor it and find out when its stopped working and needs replacement. |
#4
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Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact
that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? -- Kenny Cargill "Gregory Kleverlaan" wrote in message ... "Nikonja" wrote in message news On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 22:53:41 +0100, Kenny wrote: Just installed new Gigabyte GA-K8NSC-939 m/b. It has 3 fan connectors on it: CPU_FAN - connected NB_FAN (chipset) - connected SYS_FAN - ? Don't know what this is and m/b manual just says it should be connected. Does it mean a case fan? If so I have a case fan which connects to PSU via standard Molex connector. PC appears to be working OK, have checked temps. and voltages etc. Thats where you connect your case fan if you want to control the speed in some software, otherwise you can leave it connected on your psu, it doesn't make no diference to your pc ! Except the fact that if you connect it to the system Fan connector on the motherboard you can monitor it and find out when its stopped working and needs replacement. |
#5
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On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 13:08:28 +0100, Kenny wrote:
Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Why would colour be a problem ! And don't play with your hardware if you don't know what are you doing, ask a friend to help you ! |
#6
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Kenny wrote:
Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Nope. Gigabyte just tend to ship pretty yellow (ish) ribbons cables. They work fine with ATA133. --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 0539-3, 30/09/2005 Tested on: 01/10/2005 23:20:01 avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2005 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#7
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In message Nikonja
wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 13:08:28 +0100, Kenny wrote: Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Why would colour be a problem ! And don't play with your hardware if you don't know what are you doing, ask a friend to help you ! Colour is often used to indicate something specific with regards to the type of port, especially when there are RAID and non-RAID enabled PATA/SATA ports on the same motherboard. *shrugs* -- I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not so sure. |
#8
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On Sun, 02 Oct 2005 00:46:45 -0600, DevilsPGD wrote:
In message Nikonja wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 13:08:28 +0100, Kenny wrote: Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Why would colour be a problem ! And don't play with your hardware if you don't know what are you doing, ask a friend to help you ! Colour is often used to indicate something specific with regards to the type of port, especially when there are RAID and non-RAID enabled PATA/SATA ports on the same motherboard. *shrugs* That's only for you to see which port is which and there's no diference in cable collour because it's yust a collour, if the cables are the same ofcourse ! |
#9
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In message Nikonja
wrote: On Sun, 02 Oct 2005 00:46:45 -0600, DevilsPGD wrote: In message Nikonja wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 13:08:28 +0100, Kenny wrote: Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Why would colour be a problem ! And don't play with your hardware if you don't know what are you doing, ask a friend to help you ! Colour is often used to indicate something specific with regards to the type of port, especially when there are RAID and non-RAID enabled PATA/SATA ports on the same motherboard. *shrugs* That's only for you to see which port is which and there's no diference in cable collour because it's yust a collour, if the cables are the same ofcourse ! Sure, but the colour is sometimes significant. If there are 2 red ports and 2 black ports, typically it indicates different capabilities. It's just a colour, but things are often coloured for a reason. -- SCIENTISTS COMPARE APPLES AND ORANGES FOR VITAMIN CONTENT "It's like comparing apples and oranges," says researcher |
#10
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On Sun, 02 Oct 2005 23:17:38 -0600, DevilsPGD wrote:
In message Nikonja wrote: On Sun, 02 Oct 2005 00:46:45 -0600, DevilsPGD wrote: In message Nikonja wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 13:08:28 +0100, Kenny wrote: Thanks for the replies. Incidentally is there any significance in the fact that the 40/80 IDE cable which came with m/b is yellow rather than the usual grey? Why would colour be a problem ! And don't play with your hardware if you don't know what are you doing, ask a friend to help you ! Colour is often used to indicate something specific with regards to the type of port, especially when there are RAID and non-RAID enabled PATA/SATA ports on the same motherboard. *shrugs* That's only for you to see which port is which and there's no diference in cable collour because it's yust a collour, if the cables are the same ofcourse ! Sure, but the colour is sometimes significant. If there are 2 red ports and 2 black ports, typically it indicates different capabilities. It's just a colour, but things are often coloured for a reason. But not with the cables !!! The question was regarding colour of cables not colour of things on mobo ! |
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