The Fan Zone
Maximum PC|May 2017

Fans are simple enough, right? Not quite. There are a few things you need to learn before you can pick with confidence. 

Chris Lloyd
The Fan Zone

Pass Electricity through a conductor, and it gets hot. All the little electrons bump into things and transfer energy. This bit of basic physics is useful for an electric fire, but a real annoyance for your silicon, which needs to be kept cool. Back in the day, the only fan you might have had on a computer was in the power supply, blowing hot air out. The Intel 486 was the first processor to need a fan of its own, on the faster versions anyway. The original Pentium could just about manage on passive cooling in its slower incarnations, but was likely to pop under load if you weren’t careful (no universal fail-safe thermal cut-offs back then—if you overheated it, you may well have killed it). Since then, every chip has needed dedicated cooling. Graphics cards soon started to get too hot to run unaided, too. The fans got bigger, and spread. Now, some motherboard chipsets, drives, and even memory modules sport fans. And case fans have proliferated into banks of spinning LED lights all over the case.

If you run an unmodified rig, the fans it came with will work well enough, albeit too noisily for comfort. If nothing else, a good fan is quieter. If you start upgrading and over clocking, adequate cooling is imperative—time to add new fans. At least they’re simple. Actually, like every aspect of PCs, fans have their own specifications and variations in design and function, so there are a few things it would be useful to know first. Although getting the “right” number and position is still something of a dark art.

The Specifications

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