โJul-06-2013 05:43 AM
โJul-08-2013 04:32 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
You can power a 12V fan from 5V but it is going to run considerably slower than designed. While that is a good thing noise wise, it does a bad thing for actual air movement. These fans get very inefficient when run at a lower speed than designed so a fan rated at 50CFM at 12V running at 5V will result in at the best 20CFM. Same happens when you take a fan that is designed for 240V and run it on 120V, you will get CONSIDERABLY LESS than half the rated CFM.
โJul-08-2013 07:31 AM
Bill.Winegard wrote:This is my favorite answer. When I was younger I built custom car stereos. My wife had one in her car and the amp would overheat and shutoff on a 100 mile trip. The amp had a clear plexiglass top so you could see the components. I bought a 2 inch computer style fan from Radio Shack and cut a hole in the amp cover to match. Glued in place so it would draw the air out of the unit rather than pushing it in. Wired it so it was only on when the amp was on. 3 years later and it was still going without issue till the day we sold the setup.
You want a quite fan like is found in a computer. Radio Shack has some 12V and 120V I believe but you will find many online. You can set them to run whenever power is available or you can add a thermostat so it only runs when the temps reach a certain level.
โJul-07-2013 06:53 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:Kiwi_too wrote:
I took a 12v fan out of an old PC I had. I wired it to a USB cable and plugged that into a 120v to 12v adapter. Pulls quite a bit of air through the cabinet.
:h
Not sure as to why you would use a USB cable in between a 12V fan and 12V power supply.
Bad things will happen if someone decided to plug a USB device in using a 12V power supply.
USB ports (and USB wall charger/power supplies) provide FIVE VOLTS, not 12V.
โJul-07-2013 06:43 PM
โJul-07-2013 04:25 PM
Kiwi_too wrote:
I took a 12v fan out of an old PC I had. I wired it to a USB cable and plugged that into a 120v to 12v adapter. Pulls quite a bit of air through the cabinet.
โJul-06-2013 09:43 PM
โJul-06-2013 07:55 PM
bwanshoom wrote:
This site has some good stuff. AC, DC, USB - if you have a USB port handy, that's the way I'd go.
โJul-06-2013 05:33 PM
โJul-06-2013 01:39 PM
tvman44 wrote:
Muffin fans are quiet and effective. (computer type) ๐
โJul-06-2013 11:31 AM
โJul-06-2013 09:19 AM
โJul-06-2013 08:28 AM
โJul-06-2013 08:23 AM
โJul-06-2013 07:12 AM
Jim Shoe wrote:
Depending on whether you're using it for 120V AC or 12V DC, grab a bathroom ceiling fan from your favorite big box HW store or CW.