Bon je crois avoir trouvé ma réponse, mais je demande confirmation
Fan Types
A 2-wire fan has power and ground terminals. A 3-wire fan has power, ground, and a tachometric (“tach”) output, which provides a signal with frequency proportional to speed. A 4-wire fan has power, ground, a tach output, and a PWM-drive input. PWM, in brief, uses the relative width of pulses in a train of on-off pulses to adjust the level of power applied to the motor.
A 2-wire fan is controlled by adjusting either the dc voltage or pulse width in low-frequency PWM. However, with only two wires, a tach signal is not readily available. This means that there is no indication as to how fast the fan is running—or indeed, if it is running at all. This form of speed control is open-loop.
A 3-wire fan can be controlled using the same kind of drive as for 2-wire fans—variable dc or low-frequency PWM. The difference between 2-wire fans and 3-wire fans is the availability of feedback from the fan for closed-loop speed control. The tach signal indicates whether the fan is running and its rate of speed.
Si j'ai bien comprit, on peut réguler la vitesse d'un ventilateur a 2 fils en modifiant le voltage, mais il n'y a aucune lecture du tachymetre donc pas moyen d'avoir la vitesse, bon j'espere que ca marchera ^^
Message édité par kedare le 12-08-2008 à 07:01:59