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idk_01 t1_ja2whuh wrote

12v wall wart ac/dc adaptor... splice n' dice

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idk_01 t1_ja2wuyf wrote

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Tamariniak OP t1_ja30ptt wrote

What about the voltage and current ratings though? What does it mean when a fan says "12V/0.3A"? Is that the maximum, the minimum, or something else? It makes me a bit scared to use lower voltages.

I also saw people saying that the fan "will always draw 0.3A regardless of the voltage," but I find that a bit weird. Surely a 12V/0.3A rating would mean that the fan has a resistance of 40 Ohms and the current would just be I = V / R.

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SomethingIrreverent t1_ja3cq3n wrote

You need a 12V adapter that can supply at least 0.3 A. If you have a 12 VDC adapter that can supply more current than that, it will work fine. If your adapter can only handle 0.2 A, you'll have trouble.

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5degreenegativerake t1_ja3fy5q wrote

And if you have “a couple” fans, you need 0.3A per fan on the wall wart spec.

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Diligent_Nature t1_ja3vqbp wrote

>people saying that the fan "will always draw 0.3A regardless of the voltage,"

That's nonsense. 0.3A is the nominal current. Lower voltage=lower current. It could be a little higher if airflow is impeded.

>Surely a 12V/0.3A rating would mean that the fan has a resistance of 40 Ohms and the current would just be I = V / R.

Ohm's law applies to DC in resistors. Fans use coils which have inductance as well as resistance. They commutate the DC into AC for the coils. Plus most DC fans are brushless and you can't measure the resistance directly because of their electronic commutation.

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discotim t1_ja4ae0o wrote

You want 12 volts and go overboard on the current, 2 Amp or more wall or inline warts are tiny. The fans will only draw the current they need and won't tax the power supply.

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kyrsjo t1_ja58joo wrote

You don't want to go too far overboard tough, switch mode power supplies aren't really stable without load.

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idk_01 t1_ja5imz7 wrote

12V/0.3A means that it requires 12V and .03A

The fan manufacturer has a datasheet out there somewhere that will have the tolerances of the device (i.e max & min levels etc.)

But for practical usage any 12v source, be it a battery or an ac/dc adaptor, that can supply at least .3 Amps should power your fan.

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