Power fan below threshhold
Power fan below threshhold
My wife's pc started beeping today, and the Asus pc probe program flashed on the screen (she has an asus cusl2 mb). It displayed the fan monitor box and said the "Power fan below threshold" and also
0 value for the power fan.
I shut it down, cleaned out the box (it was dusty, with some cobwebs, but not horribly so), and put it back together. The same warning box and sound came up when I fired it back on. I closed the asus probe and the machine runs fine....but I'm wondering what to do at this point.
the machine is pretty ancient a p3 800 OC'd to 966mhz.
nothing else is overclocked, and its been running fine OC'd for 3 years or so.
The power fan is the fan in the Power supply right?
Should I replace the PSU, or is this a non issue?
I wouldnt even know about it, except that I installed the asus program when I installed the mb drivers....
thanks for any help.
RM
0 value for the power fan.
I shut it down, cleaned out the box (it was dusty, with some cobwebs, but not horribly so), and put it back together. The same warning box and sound came up when I fired it back on. I closed the asus probe and the machine runs fine....but I'm wondering what to do at this point.
the machine is pretty ancient a p3 800 OC'd to 966mhz.
nothing else is overclocked, and its been running fine OC'd for 3 years or so.
The power fan is the fan in the Power supply right?
Should I replace the PSU, or is this a non issue?
I wouldnt even know about it, except that I installed the asus program when I installed the mb drivers....
thanks for any help.
RM
300-350 watts will be plenty. I prefer better brands than what are available at Compusa but it should suffice for your purposes.
There are 4 screws holding the PSU in, probably one of the easier jobs to perform. Just note the position of and the way the colours go on the plugs.
Be careful to align the plugs before trying to jam them on.
All in all you'll find it a pretty easy job.
There are 4 screws holding the PSU in, probably one of the easier jobs to perform. Just note the position of and the way the colours go on the plugs.
Be careful to align the plugs before trying to jam them on.
All in all you'll find it a pretty easy job.
you guys forgot one major thing to check:
Is the fan actually monitored and is it really dead.... use your hand to tell the ultimate truth.
my asus probe shows the same thing, but my PSU Fan is not monitored.
what kind of PSU is this? and is the fan monitored?
chances are if it WAS previously showing a PSU Fan Speed, then it is a monitored fan. for a 5 year old PC i seriosly doubt this PSU needs to be changed. plug it back in and turn it on. stick your hand behind your PC and see if there is warm air blowing out the PSU Fan slot. if there is, disable the Power Fan monitor, and continue to use you PC as normal.
Is the fan actually monitored and is it really dead.... use your hand to tell the ultimate truth.
Krom, you of all people not to ask: "Did you put your hand near the fan slot? Is it blowing out warm air?"Krom wrote:I'd replace the PSU, or at least get the PSU fan working again. If it overheats it could be trouble for the system.
my asus probe shows the same thing, but my PSU Fan is not monitored.
what kind of PSU is this? and is the fan monitored?
chances are if it WAS previously showing a PSU Fan Speed, then it is a monitored fan. for a 5 year old PC i seriosly doubt this PSU needs to be changed. plug it back in and turn it on. stick your hand behind your PC and see if there is warm air blowing out the PSU Fan slot. if there is, disable the Power Fan monitor, and continue to use you PC as normal.
I havent taken it out of the case yet, but it's blowing air just fine...its not warm air though (mildly cool).
I visually see the fan moving fine.
"power fan below threshhold" is what the monitor says...so it recognizes that the fan is working.
I'm pretty sure it was monitored all along, especially since I havent done a thing to this machine in a long while (including looking for new drivers for the mb or a new Asus probe program for that matter).
I went by circuit city and the cheapest PSU they had was $68 for a 350
I visually see the fan moving fine.
"power fan below threshhold" is what the monitor says...so it recognizes that the fan is working.
I'm pretty sure it was monitored all along, especially since I havent done a thing to this machine in a long while (including looking for new drivers for the mb or a new Asus probe program for that matter).
I went by circuit city and the cheapest PSU they had was $68 for a 350
wrong, asus probe "ASSUMES" its a fan that can be monitored, when in fact it is not a monitored fan.ReadyMan wrote:I havent taken it out of the case yet, but it's blowing air just fine...its not warm air though (mildly cool).
I visually see the fan moving fine.
"power fan below threshhold" is what the monitor says...so it recognizes that the fan is working.
I'm pretty sure it was monitored all along, especially since I havent done a thing to this machine in a long while (including looking for new drivers for the mb or a new Asus probe program for that matter).
my PSU Fan works, and asus probe says its below threshold? does that mean my PSU is dead? no, in fact its working perfectly.
thats all you need to know that its working fine. case closed. turn off the monitor for asus probe and your "Threshold" issue goes away.but it's blowing air just fine...its not warm air though (mildly cool).
I visually see the fan moving fine.
i bet, if you popped open that PSU, if you look at the wires to the fan, there are only two of them. a red one and a black one. VDC+12 = red Common/Ground = Black
a fan that supports RPM monitoring would have a third wire usualy blue or green, sometimes white.
sorry to say, you just spent 68$ + tax on something that was working just fineI went by circuit city and the cheapest PSU they had was $68 for a 350
i got a test for you....
download Asus Probe.... and run it. does your PSU have a monitored fan? cuz if it doesnt, i guarantee you Asus probe will still give you a "Threshold" warning.
Asus Probe is no smarter or better than Motherboard Monitor or SpeedFan. it only interprets what your SuperIO Sensor chip is detecting. but since the Sensor chip is not feeding a PSU Fan RPM and it ASSUMES there is a monitored fan on the PSU, it throws that warning at you.
download Asus Probe.... and run it. does your PSU have a monitored fan? cuz if it doesnt, i guarantee you Asus probe will still give you a "Threshold" warning.
Asus Probe is no smarter or better than Motherboard Monitor or SpeedFan. it only interprets what your SuperIO Sensor chip is detecting. but since the Sensor chip is not feeding a PSU Fan RPM and it ASSUMES there is a monitored fan on the PSU, it throws that warning at you.
I can disable it from my asus probe...
I took it out of the case and its an off brand:
SPI Sparkle Power Int'l LTD Model NO. FSP300-60GT
cant seem to take the thing apart to see the various wires.
I didnt buy the PSU from CC.
I dont really want to put more than $50 in this machine, as it's just going to be a server after I get my new rig (I'm ordering it last week of Nov.)
I took it out of the case and its an off brand:
SPI Sparkle Power Int'l LTD Model NO. FSP300-60GT
cant seem to take the thing apart to see the various wires.
I didnt buy the PSU from CC.
I dont really want to put more than $50 in this machine, as it's just going to be a server after I get my new rig (I'm ordering it last week of Nov.)
off brand?!?!ReadyMan wrote: I took it out of the case and its an off brand:
SPI Sparkle Power Int'l LTD Model NO. FSP300-60GT
Sparkle is the same company as Forton, hence the model number FSP = Forton Source Power.
Some of the best PSU's made.
The reason the PSU is pushing out cool air is probably becuase that PSU is hardly under any load with that system
That sparkle would probably run fine with almost zero air flow, I would just leave it. If anything replace the fan if you think it's not moving enough air.
And the heck with circit city, u can get a name brand PSU for that system on newegg for less then $30 shipped.
I'm pretty sure (60%) that it had a readout of OK in the monitoring page.
I havent done a thing to this pc, including cleaning it, in over a year (wait..hmm. I bought a 21" sony monitor for it 2 weeks ago, and replaced my existing 17" sony with it. that's the only change I've done: unplugging the old monitor and plugging in the new one.).
The monitor should pull more power though... (it's a Sony 21" E540)
I dont think the sensor is busted, since it rates the existing fines just fine.
I havent done a thing to this pc, including cleaning it, in over a year (wait..hmm. I bought a 21" sony monitor for it 2 weeks ago, and replaced my existing 17" sony with it. that's the only change I've done: unplugging the old monitor and plugging in the new one.).
The monitor should pull more power though... (it's a Sony 21" E540)
I dont think the sensor is busted, since it rates the existing fines just fine.