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Author Topic: fan thermostat  (Read 6559 times)

hoglyf

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fan thermostat
« on: July 26, 2009, 09:49:12 PM »

at what temperature does the fan turn on?  i've been copying files to my DNS-323 for close to 5 hours now and the fan has yet to kick in.  the case is barely warm to the touch, although i only have one hard drive currently installed.

thanks!

bueller, anyone, bueller?   ;D
« Last Edit: July 27, 2009, 08:25:54 PM by hoglyf »
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ECF

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #1 on: July 30, 2009, 10:35:13 AM »

Like 43 degrees C it should turn off.
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Never forget that only dead fish swim with the stream

hoglyf

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #2 on: July 30, 2009, 11:38:58 AM »

Like 43 degrees C it should turn off.

the warmest my DNS-323 has gotten so far is 111 fahrenheit (~43.8 celsius) and the fan did not turn on.  in fact, the fan on my DNS has never turned on.  i emailed tech support about this about 2 days ago and i have not received a reply yet (inquiring about at what temperature does the fan kick in).
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jmonfar

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #3 on: July 31, 2009, 02:35:01 AM »

Searching a little on the forum, this question has been asked before and never got a authoritative answer by D-Link staff.

The best founded hint, coming from old FW release notes, is that trigger temperatures could be 43, 46 and 49 celsius. This is typically interpreted as fan stopped below 43, over this starts at low speed (less than 3000rpm), at 46 goes to medium speed (somewhere at or above 4000rpm), and full speed is fired up at 49 (6300rpm or so).

Note that, by most accounts, units rarely go over 44-45 degrees whatever the load, so in fact fans are likely to be working typically at low speed. Have observed that low speed is so silent that you can easily think it's stopped, and the air flow is also barely noticeable with your fingers only (had to introduce a small point of paper and hear it hitting the fan to be sure it was on). But they don't go below this, either, and most people feels this as too warm for the disks.

The message for D-Link FW programmers is that most people feels not comfortable with this operating temperatures, we would like to keep our beloved disks at lower temperatures, so a most aggressive setup would be very welcome by users.

Or even better, allow us to make adjustments without recurring to FW hacks. Today, our only 'official' option is to set fan to permanent full speed, and that seems just an overkill on the opposite side, producing unnecessarily noise and wear when the unit is idle. The truth must be in the middle, something like being able to set a reasonable target temperature, around which fan speed increases to whatever is needed to keep it there, or simply to full speed until is somewhere below the target.
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hoglyf

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #4 on: August 01, 2009, 10:17:11 AM »

got a response back from tech support yesterday.  he wrote that the fan should kick in at about 114F (45.5C), and of course stops at temperatures below that.

i checked my DNS-323 just now (it's on but hard drive in hibernate state for over 12 hours) and it's really "cool" to the touch, but the online status page says that the temperature is at 96F (35.5C).  i thought for sure it would read around 75F or lower.  ???

maybe the temperature sensor sits right next to something that constantly generates heat?
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lizzi555

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #5 on: August 01, 2009, 11:57:09 AM »

Quote from: hoglyf
maybe the temperature sensor sits right next to something that constantly generates heat?
The sensor has to be near the CPU for correct measurement of the system temp.
Hardrives stay much cooler at about 25-27°C when hibernated and system temp is 35°.

I've seen the same in my Synology NAS where I can read out system and harddisk temp in the menu.
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hoglyf

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #6 on: August 02, 2009, 08:12:00 AM »

The sensor has to be near the CPU for correct measurement of the system temp.
Hardrives stay much cooler at about 25-27°C when hibernated and system temp is 35°.

that makes sense.
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hoglyf

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #7 on: August 16, 2009, 06:24:11 PM »

it's a hot summer day in san jose, ca, and the fan on my DNS-323 turned on for the first time (that i am aware of).  the temperature on the status page indicated 111 degrees F, so i'm assuming the trigger point is just before it turns 112 degress F.  it quickly brought the temperature down to 109 degrees F and it stayed on for about 10 minutes (it still read 109, but i'm assuming this is before it got down to 108).  and it is actually an intake fan, and not an exhaust (i put a piece of paper right next to the fan and it was getting sucked in).

just another observation (that most of you are likely aware about):  the drives get turned on and off independently of each other, depending of course on which one is getting accessed.  so one can be used for hours while the other one remains in hibernation.  i did not know and just found out about this neat feature. ;D
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Tonytoronto

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Re: fan thermostat
« Reply #8 on: August 17, 2009, 01:18:11 PM »

it's a hot summer day in san jose, ca, and the fan on my DNS-323 turned on for the first time (that i am aware of).  the temperature on the status page indicated 111 degrees F, so i'm assuming the trigger point is just before it turns 112 degress F.  it quickly brought the temperature down to 109 degrees F and it stayed on for about 10 minutes (it still read 109, but i'm assuming this is before it got down to 108).  and it is actually an intake fan, and not an exhaust (i put a piece of paper right next to the fan and it was getting sucked in).

just another observation (that most of you are likely aware about):  the drives get turned on and off independently of each other, depending of course on which one is getting accessed.  so one can be used for hours while the other one remains in hibernation.  i did not know and just found out about this neat feature. ;D

  Thats odd, on mine (rev b1) the fan blows out, you can feel the air/heat back unit.
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