🌪️ Cool Down, Power Up!
The DBTB0428B2G is a high-performance 40mm cooling fan designed for AVC 4028 applications. With a robust 1A current and dual ball bearing technology, it ensures efficient airflow and durability. Its compact dimensions and PWM temperature control make it an ideal choice for server environments, balancing power and noise reduction.
S**O
This thing is seriously powerful.
I am using for a diy 12715 peltier cooling plate. As you know the 12715 module can pull 12v and 10-15 amps. It's a monster of a peltier. With a single albeit huge aluminum heat sink, plenty of thermal grease and just this singular fan mounted to a PWM controller, I was able to consistently get the semiconductor stable at around 3° f with only this tiny fan cooling the hot side. That was stable temperature too, not peak. Big difference. I could run that 3° f all day long without the heat overpowering the fan. This was achieved with the fan at full power and the semiconductor pulling around 10 volts and 6 amps. Nowhere near its peak, but impressive as all hell. It's the positive pressure design of the fan with almost a built-in duct because it's so thick as well as the RPMs which I've heard is around 18,000 at full tilt. It's pretty much a cold air hair dryer at full throttle it can blow papers off my desk from across my room which is quite large and actually has some kickback, that's how powerful this fan is. With the setup I mentioned above I was able to achieve about a quarter inch thick layer of ice on the cold side heat sink on the semiconductor within 35 minutes of 6 amps of continuous draw from my 300 watt adjustable power supply. From what this singular fan proved to me, I figure if I order three more and a much bigger heat sink to accommodate, I could run that semiconductor close to full capacity with no cooling issues whatsoever. I thought for sure I'd have to go water cooling for a 12715 but these fans have proved otherwise. They are extremely loud when at full throttle but for my application, which is intermittent fast cooling of electronics on a cold aluminum plate, this is just fine as it runs for very short periods so the turbine like sound of this fan doesn't bother me too much. It is very much a turbine sound though, it's almost ear piercing if left on for a long time, thank God for my Galaxy buds 2 pro with active noise cancellation for the longer sessions because this sucker really screams but it puts out the CFMs to back it up so I don't mind the noise.I've been using it a few times a week for around 3 months now with some sessions having the fan run full throttle for close to 2 hours at a time with absolutely no issues whatsoever, the most I've ever experienced is after about 2 hours the fan will be slightly warm to the touch but that could be from the peltier as well. All in all it was a great buy and it blows just as much air as it did on day one as it does now. It's become old faithful for me and moves easily 5 times the air as my 120 mm 12 volt 0.25 amp fan. Granted the 120 mm is nowhere near as thick so there's no ducting whatsoever and I don't believe it's meant for positive pressure like this is but still these little things seem to be the way to go if you want to successfully cool off a ridiculously angry power-hungry peltier module. Just make sure you get a really high-end heat sink. The heat sink is the most crucial part of any semiconductor setup. Mine is milled from a solid block of aluminum with copper vapor chambers at each corner running down to the hot side ventilation blocks, there are four copper vapor chambers running to two cooling blocks I plan to have two of these fans on each cooling block and I have no doubts I'll be able to run my chip at it's a rated maximum without any overheating issues since I can run it more than half of its capacity with just this single 40x40 fan
F**S
Loud and powerful
I bought this fan to put a permanent end to my heat creep issues with my 3D printer. I actually have to run at it less than half speed, or else it does its job too well and the extruder heater goes under temp. This thing is loud enough that it could probably cause hearing damage at max power given enough time, making it unsuitable for basically any application other than servers if you plan to run it at full speed.
C**T
Fan moves a lot of air at high static pressure
this fan moves a ton of air at high static pressure.. it is noisy if you run it on full speed 2 wire mode (black / red). sounds a little like a mini vacuum. with the high RPM it means the fan can generate good static pressure.. works great for 1u servers where you pack in a lot of SSD drives and need extra air. the connector on the end is smaller than what most fan connectors on motherboards support, you will either need an adapter or to make your own connection. these do fit supermicro 1u server cases but connector needs adapted.
E**I
Very fast, not very noisy 40 x 40 x 28 mm fans
These fans are meant for 1U rack servers and network devices. This particular model is specified to reach 18,000 RPM, which is around the maximum for this fan size, and equipped with ball bearings for durability. It cannot therefore be expected to be as silent as models without ball bearings, but should last years longer than the latter.My application is as replacement of the original fans of a Cisco ASA firewall (known to ramp up the fan speed to maximum every few minutes, which results in a sudden increase of the fan noise), and in this application they make the noise slightly more bearable than the original shrill whistle. I previously tried using Noctuas in the same device, which are far more silent, but their RPM speed was not sufficient to keep up with the necessary airflow and caused continuous alarms.
R**W
55db not 25db
I wanted a quiet fan but this one is anything but. I ended up using 5v and it is about 35db. I will have to use that for now until I find another solution.
R**Y
Tornado Maker
Bought for an LED, would also work on a Caterpillar 796 AC mining dump truck. Could also be used in geo-engineering if a tornado or hurricane were ever needed.Why’s it gotta be so powerful? My PWM controller doesn’t even allow it to spin at full speed…Holy moly this thing is awesome!
A**E
High speed
This little 12v fan produces quite a bit of wind without too much noise. Haven’t experienced any problems with it so far after more than a month
B**E
Awesome Fan! But wired wrong and no data sheet!!!
This fan is awesome - but there is no data sheet and I lost a day identifying the pinout inaccuracy (see attached image) so three stars. Would have been two stars but, I did also find that this fan goes even faster than what it's rating of 18,000 RPM.Using a 12.6 3S battery at full throttle and measuring with an oscilloscope I found a frequency of 754Hz on the tach (see scope image). Assuming two pulses per revolution (which is standard on most 4 pin fans - but again no datasheet sooooo)...Anywho: (754hz * 60) / 2 pulse per rev = 22,620 RPM! Not bad!!!
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1 день назад
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