GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

maleko48
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GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by maleko48 »

Hey guys, I thought I would post my findings regarding the erratic fan behavior I see many complaining about...

My unit is the GK3V w/motherboard revision: "GK1_v23 09.04.2020" but the fan concerns seem to span multiple models.

https://snipboard.io/EY7H9o.jpg
001_EY7H9o.jpg
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As most of you have mentioned, my fan was also only kicking on under heavy loads for the mostpart, but does tend to kick on for only a few seconds then goes off and cycles back on repeatedly. My first observation upon disassembling my unit was that the heat sink on these contains a single extra square of aluminum that is thermal pasted to the bottom of the main heat sink w/fins and the fan/sheet metal upper enclosure housing, but the extra square does NOT actually make contact with the die of the CPU. This will cause very spikey temperatures and possibly erratic fan behavior if the sensor data is changing rapidly in response to the CPU's power demands.

https://snipboard.io/zBZ1bN.jpg
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My first order of business was to improve thermal conductivity by replacing the small aluminum square stuck to the bottom of the main heatsink assembly with a thermal paste stamp. I popped the aluminum square off and replaced it with 2 (old) pure copper pennies that I lapped down to flat discs and then soldered together. The 2-stack of pennies was then adhered with 0.15mm thermal tape. I noticed the pennies are at risk of contacting resistors on the surface around the CPU die so I took a thin (0.5mm I think) thermal pad and cut a square out of the center so I could lay it over the resistors and not obstruct contact with the die's surface.

https://snipboard.io/GblSW0.jpg
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https://snipboard.io/4PGJFh.jpg
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I repeated the steps twice more and made 2 other 2-stacks of pennies to be used as heatsinks for the memory chips as well. Those too needed a bit of thermal padding to protect from any unwanted electrical contact. So after using thermal grease and checking clearance/fitment all around I mounted it up and the fit is perfect!

https://snipboard.io/AhEdOT.jpg
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https://snipboard.io/UNt5Ab.jpg
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Next up, I made a padded fan intake shroud using double stick mounting tape and some cork gasket material I had laying around. This helps to prevent the fan from sucking in hot air from inside the chassis. I may go a bit further in sealing the chassis internally at a later date but I am still testing some things that require frequent disassembly.

https://snipboard.io/h76Fzf.jpg
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https://snipboard.io/KxtTw5.jpg
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008_KxtTw5.jpg (479.35 KiB) Viewed 19996 times
So now, onto my observations since getting this machine, playing with it stock, upgrading it, then playing with it modified...

My fan also does the buzzing/stuttering and will jitter in place or rotate only a couple of degrees extremely slowly. I noticed this while running a benchmark to heat my machine up and expecting to see the fan come on but it wasn't. Turns out the fan control tries to turn the fan on right around 80C. This is the time that it buzzes/stutters/barely spins less than 1/10 of a rotation and so does not actually come on. At first I thought I had broken my fan but I probably just never noticed this behavior without physically looking at the fan while also watching the CPU temps. Continuing the stress testing further, I noticed the fan finally spun up when my machine was in the 90C-95C range and continued to do so intermittently. Thankfully I saw this before buying a replacement fan! Finally, going further, as my unit was getting into the 95C-105C range (while torturing it with Prime95) the fan FINALLY kicked on and stayed on full time keeping my unit just below its thermal throttling limit, but not actually thermal throttling (it was holding a steady 2.40GHz on all 4 cores the entire time). After turning the heat down by implementing a 9W power limit using ThrottleStop, it is now hovering right around 80C while crunching Prime95. There was about a 5 or 10 minute heat-soaked cooldown period that kept the fan on steady but then it went right back to cycling on and off as expected.

TLDR:
The stock heatsink assembly can easily and cheaply be improved using cheap thermal pads, a couple of old copper pennies, a fine hand file, thermal tape, double stick mounting tape, and foil HVAC tape.

The fan control leaves a bit to be desired... It is not pushing enough juice to start the fan at the low end of its active thermal cooling range causing the fan to cycle intermittently at medium loads (my fan goes starts buzzing around , and keeps the fan on constant under heavy-extreme loads (this is good!). I have not yet found a way to take manual control of it, but that is next on my list.

FAN BEHAVIOR:

00C - 50C -- fan off/no buzzing? (not sure because my box idles in the high 50C range)
55C - 79C -- fan off, but buzzing still if you listen closely or put your finger on it to feel the vibration, may jitter in place occasionally
80C - 94C -- this is the temperature range my fan actually starts kicking on intermittently
95C - 96C -- I noticed my fan still cycles intermittently but seems to stay on a little bit longer and spin a little faster
97C - 105C -- my fan stays on constantly at max speed after sustaining this temperature for a bit and will continue for a good 5-10 minutes after eliminating the load

Aside from BIOS / thermal sensors / EC settings, I imagine Intel's DPTF may also play a role in some of this behavior. Regardless though, you can boot this motherboard with no heatsinking at all and it will peak out at 105C very easily, but Intel's algorithms do keep the CPU safe and working by throttling it as needed.

In the end, I have a 10W TDP machine that can crank out 10W in a synthetic load all day long, albeit a bit toasty after 45 minutes+ but under normal usage conditions this thing does great.

EDIT:

This is the double stick mounting tape I used:
https://snipboard.io/HMtbAZ.jpg
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009_HMtbAZ.png (353.07 KiB) Viewed 19996 times
Last edited by maleko48 on Mon Apr 05, 2021 8:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by admin »

Thank you very much for your experiment, and we appreciate your DIY.
We are currently promoting a fan improvement plan. Please don’t worry.
I will stick your post to the top until the fan improvement is complete. The problem we are solving is fan noise and intermittent problems.
We affirm your technology and hope you can become our Super User. After becoming a Super User, you can get our products and test them for free.
Thanks for joining the forum fans, we will become friends here. Any suggestions about the forum I am open to hearing.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by maleko48 »

@admin thank you for the kind words. Feel free to reach out to me if you want me to check out any other hardware of yours. I hope to run more experiments soon! :geek:
wenrico
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by wenrico »

IMG_2266.jpg
IMG_2266.jpg (1.76 MiB) Viewed 20107 times
Bonjour ,
Désolé mais ce sera en français ..
Je viens de faire l'achat d'un GK3V (GK1_V24A _2020.11.26 ) et je constate également un comportement anormal du ventilateur ( ronronnement et mise en route intermittente !) et des températures moyennes autour de 75 °C sans stresser le Cpu .
Je pense que le ventilateur ne peut pas tourner avec la tension proposée par le système (autour de 3V ) et donc ronronne jusqu'à ce que le cpu chauffe de plus en plus et le système envoie du 5v et il démarre !
Ce ventilateur ne fonctionne pas en PWM donc aucun contrôle de la vitesse de rotation ! C'est du tout ou rien !!!
J'espère que Acepc trouvera rapidement une solution . :idea: :idea: :idea:
pour info : le connecteur du ventilateur sur la motherboard a 3 pin donc une information tachymétrique est utilisable ,mais cette carte mère c'est elle gérer l'info ? si oui un ventilateur 3 pins pourrait être utilisé :?: pour mieux réguler la vitesse du ventilateur
Cordialement ...
Last edited by wenrico on Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by admin »

Merci beaucoup pour votre suggestion. Nous continuerons à fournir des commentaires à l'usine. L'usine améliore actuellement le problème du ventilateur et vos suggestions amélioreront mieux le ventilateur.
Thanks for joining the forum fans, we will become friends here. Any suggestions about the forum I am open to hearing.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by maleko48 »

@wenrico

My GK3V idles around 55C at the desktop on a clean, updated Win10 vanilla install AFTER my heatsink mods from above. This is after a fresh boot and allowing it to settle in for a few minutes, where it idles between 7-10% CPU usage.

While the included fan does a good enough job keeping my CPU cool with my modded heatsink, mounting a 120mm desktop fan with some double sided mounting tape is far easier for less-technically inclined people and is easily reversable. Additionally, you gain the benefit of adequate SSD cooling. Although I do think without my heatsink mods a full synthetic load like Prime95 will overwhelm a stock unit and cause it to throttle.

I went the extra mile and used double sided mounting tape and foil HVAC tape to seal and direct air internally and increase static air pressure inside the chassis.

Here is a picture of the fan I purchased from Amazon:
https://snipboard.io/F0EQLg.jpg
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https://snipboard.io/GrVNZ9.jpg
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002_GrVNZ9.png (406.01 KiB) Viewed 19991 times
Here is a picture of my fan as installed:
https://snipboard.io/ts46gM.jpg

EDIT:

I forgot to mention, with the 5V USB 120mm desktop fan installed as pictured, my unit idles at 37-39C, a full 15+C cooler while idling at 7-10% CPU usage! :mrgreen:

If I kill all of my extra programs and applications and allow it to idle on my desktop, my idle CPU usage drops to 3% and idle temps drop to 35C.
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003_ts46gM.jpg
003_ts46gM.jpg (489.91 KiB) Viewed 19991 times
Last edited by maleko48 on Mon Apr 05, 2021 9:28 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by admin »

OMG! Noctua fan is powerful enough. If it can be quiet enough at the same time, then it is a good choice.
Thanks for joining the forum fans, we will become friends here. Any suggestions about the forum I am open to hearing.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by maleko48 »

admin wrote: Mon Apr 05, 2021 3:49 am OMG! Noctua fan is powerful enough. If it can be quiet enough at the same time, then it is a good choice.
I suppose if you wanted a slower speed, quieter fan profile than the 5V USB provides, you could undervolt it using an inline module cheaply available if not making it yourself. A fan speed dial could be fun :).
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by wenrico »

admin wrote: Mon Apr 05, 2021 3:49 am OMG! Noctua fan is powerful enough. If it can be quiet enough at the same time, then it is a good choice.


J'ai choisi cette solution :
fan.png
fan.png (442.99 KiB) Viewed 19919 times



https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001 ... 6c37ABhT3c
Last edited by wenrico on Wed Apr 07, 2021 4:57 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: GK3V & Others -- Fan Behavior EXPLAINED

Post by admin »

Wow, it looks like this fan is also very powerful.
Thanks for joining the forum fans, we will become friends here. Any suggestions about the forum I am open to hearing.
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