DIY your own USB fan (using a PC case fan!)

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
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    DIY your own USB fan (using a PC case fan!)
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Komentáře • 951

  • @halsti99
    @halsti99 Před 6 lety +529

    just a quick tip for your next time soldering, you get a better connection if you heat up the thing you want to solder and than apply the solder to that piece. if you melt the solder and drop it on a cold piece, you might get a weaker connection.

  • @w4stedspace
    @w4stedspace Před 6 lety +75

    Asked for tips, so here's mine: When cutting off a connector leave yourself a few inches of wire, you never know when you'll suddenly need a 3pin fan connector for example and you'll thank yourself for leaving that spare when you do :)
    Random vid, but enjoyed :)

  • @diogosimoes9068
    @diogosimoes9068 Před 6 lety +183

    It is summer so temperatures are... *RYZEN*

  • @Dracossaint
    @Dracossaint Před 6 lety +296

    No rgb, well Im not a fan of this video ^.~

    • @outdoorplug552
      @outdoorplug552 Před 6 lety +8

      Dennis Rigdon ha fan

    • @shadowhalo123
      @shadowhalo123 Před 6 lety +5

      he has the G tho

    • @techtubertv9590
      @techtubertv9590 Před 6 lety +4

      8:53

    • @Sandman74blue
      @Sandman74blue Před 6 lety

      Ha! Puns.

    • @Dracossaint
      @Dracossaint Před 6 lety +1

      TechTuberTV I know but you could use a the same device he used for the 12v conversion to power. Cablemod rgb controller, then bam rgb . But it was for the pun sake tbh

  • @kayilla6413
    @kayilla6413 Před 6 lety +196

    Will this give me more fps?

    • @Pasi123
      @Pasi123 Před 6 lety +19

      No, but it makes you cooler.

    • @iamthemobey
      @iamthemobey Před 6 lety +14

      +15% FPS

    • @Vuldo
      @Vuldo Před 6 lety +5

      Yes

    • @Tractionless
      @Tractionless Před 6 lety +18

      Better room air circulation -> ambient temp lower -> lower CPU temps -> less CPU throttling -> more fps.

    • @zaleskar
      @zaleskar Před 6 lety +6

      Due to the decrease of room temperature, you will get approximately +%0.0000002 FPS

  • @thegeek9049
    @thegeek9049 Před 6 lety +159

    “You’ll need a wire cutter and a stripper, no not that kind of stripper”
    -Kyle
    This is why I love this channel.

    • @doctorlovera
      @doctorlovera Před 6 lety +2

      And that is why wifeysauce love it too.

    • @piter4595
      @piter4595 Před 6 lety +1

      Tinkering with your hardware....

    • @miasam9666
      @miasam9666 Před 4 lety +2

      cry me a river, it was a normal joke, nothing special

    • @Tekillyah
      @Tekillyah Před 2 lety

      Yeah that's as close as to a stripper we can get.

  • @Natewu188
    @Natewu188 Před 6 lety +226

    Now, just wait for RGB Power banks.

  • @JackLe1127
    @JackLe1127 Před 6 lety +4

    I just finished with my desk fan project as well. I modeled and 3D printed the fan shroud with venturi effect that we saw at computex to mount mine on. I used an old 12v power plug from my broken handheld vacuum to power it. It works pretty well.

  • @ecromancer
    @ecromancer Před 6 lety +20

    Why didn't you get a 3 pin fan extension cable so you didn't need to cut the connector off the fan?

  • @Chrisket
    @Chrisket Před 6 lety +94

    Just get a bunch of rgb fans and cover your ceiling in them, and badabing badaboom, you have cooling and lighting

    • @pcguy98
      @pcguy98 Před 6 lety +1

      Brilliant... just brilliant.

    • @lfox02
      @lfox02 Před 6 lety +4

      But will they be able to move any air when they're against the ceiling?

    • @Chrisket
      @Chrisket Před 6 lety +11

      Nick sshhhhh

    • @tompson47
      @tompson47 Před 6 lety

      @ Nick just take longer screws and make sure to leave a small gap between the fans and the ceiling? if the fans are 25mm thick, then 50mm or longer screws will get the job done... But I dont know if screws that long exist :D

    • @mini_disc
      @mini_disc Před 6 lety +1

      GENIUS.

  • @aprilvalley
    @aprilvalley Před 5 lety +2

    0:37 - Another reason is I made my own soldering exhaust fan by watching this video. Installed a carbon filter and more. Thanks Kyle!

  • @netravatpendsey
    @netravatpendsey Před 6 lety +7

    You should mention how voltage, Ampere and power are related. Since you are boosting the voltage, in order to keep the input and output power same, you must have a higher current on the input side.
    For example. If the fan need 12V 1A to work properly, then the input need to be 5V at 2.4A to supply the necessary power. Which finally leads to the conclusion that the USB should be connected to a good socket, which can output a larger amount of current

    • @vasileiospgr
      @vasileiospgr Před rokem

      like a usb hub that i have from TP-Link that also has 2 usb ports for 2.4A rated for charging :)

  • @bloomin4269
    @bloomin4269 Před 6 lety +81

    Cool. Now make a DIY usb air conditioner with a liquid cooler...
    I don't know how but just do it.

    • @jaylocked9072
      @jaylocked9072 Před 6 lety +4

      Actually this would be really easy. an old cooler box. bag of ice, some cold water, some soft tubing/fish tank pump, Radiator and mounted fan/fans. Tools needed a jig saw that cut through plastic and a screw driver. Pretty straight forward DIY AC.

    • @doctorlovera
      @doctorlovera Před 6 lety +3

      Use water, and ice in a cool box and an AllInOne liquid cooler with the radiator out of the cool box and the block/pump inmersed in the water. Set the diy fan behind the radiatior and pointing towards you and voila. All you need is a ton of ice and time to refill the cool box every hour.

    • @chickenby
      @chickenby Před 6 lety

      if someone wants to donate an AIO i would be more than happy to do this!
      i'd need fans as well, but yeah, whatever the cheapest aio is would be perfect, or an old leaky one would work too! I've got a tempereture probe and i can buy a small ice box and ice!

  • @achillesandhispal4196
    @achillesandhispal4196 Před 3 lety +5

    If you weld a fan connector instead - like from a Molex to a 2/3 pin adapter - you can switch out the fan whenever you want.
    Depending on how many amps your fans pull, you could even use a fan splitter to hook up multiple fans.
    Edit: USB 1 and 2 can supply 500mA (0.5 amps) and USB 3.0 can supply 900mA (0.9 amps).

  • @anderskisen1375
    @anderskisen1375 Před 6 lety +2

    I made my own portable one to cope with the outside heat. It's made out of a steel plate. Bended to an E shape. With two 120mm fans. For the power source I used 3 laptop batteries (18650) in series to create 12V. Works great and it's portable!

  • @Bamfhammer
    @Bamfhammer Před 6 lety +11

    You can use an RGB extension wire to connect either R, G, or B to the same 12v output powering your fan to turn on the LEDs... presuming that these are standard 12v RGB fans and not the addressable 5v fans.

    • @Bamfhammer
      @Bamfhammer Před 6 lety +5

      If you want to take it a step further, take 3 leads from the 12v side, 4 from the ground side and get 3 potentiometers. Set up your RGB connection to the fan placing 1 potentiometer in each of the R, G, and B leads. Wire up (and test) the potentiometers as described in this very strange video where the RGB-to-fan is the circuit: czcams.com/video/wUAiBnPg3TU/video.html
      These will allow you to adjust the color of the fan by turning any of the three knobs.

    • @Schradermusic
      @Schradermusic Před 6 lety

      Your step further is a good way to waste energy... (Assuming you want to use this with a powerbank)
      A potentiometer is basically a "modifiable" resistor and as we all know, a resistor turns electric energy into heat energy.

    • @Bamfhammer
      @Bamfhammer Před 6 lety

      The point is to be able to adjust how much power is going to each of the rgb leads, changing the color of the fan.

    • @davetruong7775
      @davetruong7775 Před 4 lety

      Bamfhammer nice jon

    • @laypyu
      @laypyu Před 2 lety

      @@davetruong7775 Why use the potentiometer for the RGB light switching, when it can be utilized for a more effective purpose: adjust fan speed. :)

  • @ChrisB2007
    @ChrisB2007 Před 6 lety +25

    You should have had Lyle build this.

    • @issaciams
      @issaciams Před 6 lety +2

      Chris Baker i don't see Lyle much anymore. Maybe he felt it was being to offensive. Idk. I would have liked it too tbh. Lol

  • @JeffJitsu
    @JeffJitsu Před 3 lety +3

    This is AWESOME!!! A couple thoughts... If you reverse the polarity of the fan wires attached to the step up converter, it will push air out of the display side. Maybe put fan screws into all holes on each side for a nice finish. Hope this helps! :D

  • @handyplayer
    @handyplayer Před 6 lety +2

    Would love to see a video on how to get the LED working properly! :)

  • @TimSzabo
    @TimSzabo Před 3 lety

    +Respect for not going over 10 minutes for ads!

  • @thegeek9049
    @thegeek9049 Před 6 lety +4

    This should be in one of those over complicated life hack videos!

  • @adrien3967
    @adrien3967 Před 6 lety +3

    BitWit ad: *Compromise nothing, with the Enermax Saberay*
    Me: *Except size lol*

  • @RhinoTV
    @RhinoTV Před 6 lety +1

    What is your cpu fan cooler in your nzxt case at the back ?? Also do you use that one for editing and rendering ?

  • @caidenfarrington9655
    @caidenfarrington9655 Před 6 lety +2

    If you wanna make it look cooler, you can wire the positive and ground backwards so the fan spins clockwise instead of counter clockwise, then you can put the fan on the stand the other way so your not looking at the backside of the fan

    • @KaitainCPS
      @KaitainCPS Před 9 měsíci

      But the blades are designed to be unidirectional. They have a concave curve facing the intended direction of airflow.

  • @kingofnfsfan
    @kingofnfsfan Před 6 lety +5

    Noctua has 5V fans listed on their website. those would be perfect.

    • @Squinoogle
      @Squinoogle Před 6 lety

      Was going to say the same thing. I've been planning something similar myself and ordered parts before discovering the Noctua 5V range. They seem to come with everything you could possibly need, including a USB adapter.

    • @RR-ho3td
      @RR-ho3td Před 4 lety

      What rpm do they have? Noctuas usually run at 1500. I'm planning to build something like this.

  • @Beastleviath
    @Beastleviath Před 6 lety

    You might consider some sort of grille / finger guard, and perhaps even a filter just for the heck of it. I know we sell them for 120mm fans, I’m sure they make larger ones too

  • @fanspans7851
    @fanspans7851 Před 4 lety +1

    I do that all the time but just not as creative as you did, like I will take the propeller off the 200mm case fan drill a hole in the middle of it and stick it on the desk fun spindle, you did the right thing because usually the more blades the fan has the less noise it makes when it spins and it won't shudder as much, the fans I use have to be 5 blades or more I once tried it with a 200mm aerocool 13 blade, it worked way better than the original 3 blade propeller!

  • @floof9789
    @floof9789 Před 4 lety +7

    6:07 DO NOT randomly choose the wires to connect... one has stripes and is the frequency signal wire and will fry your fan controller

  • @MrMike7332
    @MrMike7332 Před 6 lety +7

    "let the solder dry" 😂

  • @Low_Frequency_
    @Low_Frequency_ Před 6 lety

    I'm in the process of doing something similar right now. I'm building a 19" rack cooler for my amp out of 4 80mm fans that I mounted to a steel sheet I cut out of an old PC case. I was going to use a 12V power brick with a molex to 3 pin adapter, but after seeing your video I might just buy on eof those step up boost converters and solder it on directly. This way it saves me from having to hide all cables that are too long

  • @AndrewHoeveler
    @AndrewHoeveler Před 3 lety

    HOT TIP: I recently got a step DOWN DC-DC Buck convertor for a different project, but I thought it was broken because the potentiometer turning didn't change the voltage output. I found out that some brands when brand new, have to be turned many many many times before the voltage will adjust. You'll think it's broken, but keep turning. I think I had to turn mine about 30 times!
    This was EXACTLY the tutorial I was looking for! I bought one of those cheap USB powered twin fans to mount on a hole in the back of my PS3 cabinet. I got it all hooked up but it sounds too loud... So I got a low noise 120mm NOCTUA that should help. But I didn't know about these step UP convertors.

  • @shreyashpanchal5272
    @shreyashpanchal5272 Před 6 lety +3

    ‪I recently bought a Gigabyte aorus RX 580 8gb with stock speeds of 1365 and 2000Mhz for core and memory respectively but whenever I am on desktop of doing any task like watching videos and surfing (idle) other than gaming it drops to 300Mhz on its own. Is this how it’s supposed to behave? This is my first AMD GPU. Do Nvidia cards do the same??? Btw love ur work💙‬

    • @lucian8774
      @lucian8774 Před 5 lety

      Yeah definitely. Would you like your car to rev at 6000rpm while you're waiting at traffic lights? It's just power saving : )

  • @SnpRtv
    @SnpRtv Před 6 lety +9

    Exactly what I was looking for!

  • @lelolard3907
    @lelolard3907 Před 6 lety +1

    You can change the positive and ground wire to make it spin the other way, by doing that you could rotate the fan and put the logo in the back.

  • @RGInquisitor
    @RGInquisitor Před 6 lety

    I did the same thing a few years ago as a cheap alternative to a fume extractor for my soldering activities. I didn't use a SU Boost Converter or anything, I just cut off the end of a USB plug and soldered the wires together, and just used a $1 5v USB power adapter. Worked fine for years until I managed to save enough for a proper Fume Extractor.

  • @MrGrape-fd4mz
    @MrGrape-fd4mz Před 6 lety +6

    I will be cooler if the fan has RGB right?

  • @TVmadethemdoit
    @TVmadethemdoit Před 6 lety +26

    How is it possible that this was your first time soldering??

    • @CoalitionGaming
      @CoalitionGaming Před 6 lety +15

      His background isnt in computer repair or electronics repair in general, so it makes sense to me imo

    • @MojoChain
      @MojoChain Před 6 lety +3

      In addition to Coalition Gaming, you can see that he didn't tin the wires nor did he twist the wires (which I find gives an even better connection and makes tinning that much easier)

    • @TheHopeCreed
      @TheHopeCreed Před 6 lety +1

      Maybe "first time soldering" on camera. But hey he got the job done now it will look better when it's UL listed.

    • @theillegitking1304
      @theillegitking1304 Před 6 lety +1

      Soldering is not that hard.

    • @Deses
      @Deses Před 6 lety

      Because he never needed to solder before?

  • @powerofyes
    @powerofyes Před 2 lety

    Thanks! Gonna add a case fan to an acrylic box and stick a NUC in there, leaving the back side out. Should give it a bit of extra cooling

  • @KitelessRex
    @KitelessRex Před 6 lety

    *judges your soldering* That said not a bad job for someone who's never soldered before. I've used that exact board for some other projects. Cool little project.

  • @JuKe6
    @JuKe6 Před 6 lety +52

    The MacGyver of PC hardware. The original version. You know...The good one.

    • @reixko5192
      @reixko5192 Před 6 lety +1

      YES, look at the Great Scott! youtube channel ;)

  • @toyra
    @toyra Před 6 lety +4

    Kyle.... You really have to learn how to solder :)

    • @benlogic8592
      @benlogic8592 Před 6 lety

      yep, no station xD I remember those days when I used to do that then a master taught me the ways of weller and jbl😂

  • @SinglePlayerBRS
    @SinglePlayerBRS Před 6 lety +2

    you should've calibrated the voltage output with the fan on, as you did it the 12V will drop when the fan starts sucking up some current... One more thing, watch for the power output, USBs only outputs 2.5W of power and the booster has some draw too, so the fan needs to be less that 2.5W - (booster drain)W. about 2W

    • @joesterling4299
      @joesterling4299 Před 6 lety

      Right. And stepping up voltage means current (amps) will go up too. Should test power draw, not just voltage.

  • @johnmuse5398
    @johnmuse5398 Před 6 lety

    All pc fan connections are standardized. You could have just looked up the pinout for a 3-pin fan header to find out which is the positive and ground. The motor is probably brushless (they usually are) and it's possible to damage it if the wires are flipped.

  • @Joe-dt7wp
    @Joe-dt7wp Před 6 lety +9

    "12 volts of power" - you didn't do electronics or physics at high school did you Kyle? 😂

  • @xotaic
    @xotaic Před 6 lety

    I actually have an extra case fan, what a nifty trick

  • @MatsNorway
    @MatsNorway Před 6 lety +2

    Came just to tell you i love your thumbnails. Best in bizz!

  • @TalesOfWar
    @TalesOfWar Před 6 lety +3

    It's cheaper to just buy a dedicated USB desk fan when you consider all the extra bits you need lol.

    • @React2Quick
      @React2Quick Před 6 lety

      exactly. there was not much point in this video, the amount of effort and money you would have to put in just to do what Kyle did isn't worth it. Just buy a simple desk fan and be done with it.

    • @c.james1
      @c.james1 Před 6 lety

      I think you're both missing the point(s) of this video. If you already have spare fans, and already have a soldering iron, a DC step-up converter like the one used costs like $1, and if you already have a soldering iron, you are likely to be a person who likes tinkering with electronics.... or.... this could be a very basic intro into tinkering if you're looking to get your first soldering iron.

    • @React2Quick
      @React2Quick Před 6 lety

      Chris James ok so I can see one plausible part of this, and that's a spare fan laying around. Otherwise you would have buy a soldering iron, a pair wire strippers etc. Even then there's no guarantee it'll work. You could buy a desk fan, plug it into an outlet and done you have a fan on your desk during the summer.

    • @c.james1
      @c.james1 Před 6 lety

      Yeah, tbh I think it is mainly aimed at those people who want to buy their first soldering iron, as it is a rather good and very very simple intro into tinkering around with electronics. Because if you already have a soldering iron, you almost certainly would already know how to do this, and if not, I would be worried haha.

    • @ColtonSpears
      @ColtonSpears Před 6 lety +1

      DIY is always more expensive than just buying something off Amazon. It's more for hobbyist and less for people wanting to get whatever is cheapest.

  • @CoalitionGaming
    @CoalitionGaming Před 6 lety +148

    Now make a fidget spinner out of a fan.............

    • @dannybos7024
      @dannybos7024 Před 6 lety +14

      Or a fan out of a fidget spinner................

    • @Xenoray1
      @Xenoray1 Před 6 lety +4

      someone done this already

    • @jadinb3364
      @jadinb3364 Před 6 lety +7

      Coalition Gaming so last year

    • @Chrisket
      @Chrisket Před 6 lety +8

      *stop, you have violated the law*

    • @Gamer-df9xt
      @Gamer-df9xt Před 6 lety +5

      JayzTwoCents did that.

  • @Guapogiboy
    @Guapogiboy Před 5 lety +1

    How would you make this fan speed adjustable? Play with the voltage knobby thingy on the step up converter?? I assume lower voltage lower rpms?

  • @philipwebb1104
    @philipwebb1104 Před 6 lety

    You should do another one where you use 2 or 3 120 or 140 fans and use the mounting holes with one fan in the back and use the mounting holes and nuts and bolts to put them together. Solder the wires together and connect to the usb hub you used and have the 2 or 3 fans running together, for the people out there that have multiple 120 or 140 fans but no 200 fans. I like this diy project and more would be awesome.

  • @Arek_R.
    @Arek_R. Před 6 lety +3

    Nice *$100* fan you've got there

  • @thepixelcookies5433
    @thepixelcookies5433 Před 6 lety +3

    Plz try and put rgb on it on a second video

  • @Mike_Hogsheart
    @Mike_Hogsheart Před 6 lety

    I did something similar recently when the heat was killing me. Just took the rear fan of the PC next to my bed and pointed it at my face using some duct tape on the bed. I bought an actual USB powered fan for the same purpose now, but it was nice to get some immediate relief from the heat keeping me awake at night.

  • @Velocity_AU
    @Velocity_AU Před 11 měsíci

    So I know this video is 5 years old, but if you wanted to go the non usb stepper route AND have RGB, all you need is a simple cheap LED controller for an RGB strip, they run off 12 volts, use compatible LED ports, and if you just hook up a toggle switch, you can have it set up perfectly. And if you did still want it to be usb, throw the usb stepper in to replace the DC barrel port and it should still work (assuming your laptop is out putting enough amps)
    I have the same exact fan and it got it all working after googling a ton. Also if you want to control the fan speed, find a fan speed controller like the ones from noctua, and put it between the fan and the LED controller, and wham, adjustable speeds

  • @ogzephyr4166
    @ogzephyr4166 Před 6 lety +3

    Your mind is in the gutter like 75% of the time lol

  • @REH86
    @REH86 Před 6 lety +4

    DIY figure out a random idea for revenue because I can't come up with a decent one today.

  • @misterced4629
    @misterced4629 Před 4 lety

    That pc fan is massive

  • @dawsongamblin5246
    @dawsongamblin5246 Před 5 lety

    pro solder tip, solder the tips of the wires first to get an easier bond to the other bit of solder. also you could have hitched the 12v rgb up to the stepper too....

  • @bradyrc818
    @bradyrc818 Před 6 lety +13

    YOUR STRIPPED WIRE IS TOO LONG< AND YOU NEED TO SOLDER THE WIRE AND THE PADS FIRST BEFORE YOU SOLDER THEM TOGETHER. Lol sorry mini rant

    • @byteofwood
      @byteofwood Před 6 lety

      Chill out it still works fine

    • @bradyrc818
      @bradyrc818 Před 6 lety

      Jacob Wood lol ik I did it for the meme

    • @CaveyMoth
      @CaveyMoth Před 6 lety +1

      TIN DEM CONNECTIONZ!

    • @nathana9458
      @nathana9458 Před 6 lety +1

      I thought you said
      YOUR STRIPPED WIFE IS TOO LONG

    • @bradyrc818
      @bradyrc818 Před 6 lety

      Nathan LOL

  • @JetBen555
    @JetBen555 Před 6 lety +29

    No thanks ill just buy something premade for 10 bucks... which is less expensive than that fucking gigantic 200mm fan.

    • @c.james1
      @c.james1 Před 6 lety +3

      Not if you already have a spare fan or two laying about....... I think that was the idea.... I don't think anyone would buy one just to do this, unless they wanted the newbie DIY experience.

    • @JetBen555
      @JetBen555 Před 6 lety +4

      I bought my computer with 6 fans because the case support 6 fans ... why would you have ''parts lying around'' ? unless you are a youtuber with plenty of spare parts to make build, this is VERY impractical.

    • @c.james1
      @c.james1 Před 6 lety +8

      Because if you have been building PC's for years/decades, that is what happens....... I must have a dozen old 120mm and few 80mm fans not in use.

    • @handyplayer
      @handyplayer Před 6 lety +3

      Benoit Levesque My PC case had some fans in it but I bought better ones, so even I with 1 PC build have fans lying around :)

    • @c.james1
      @c.james1 Před 6 lety +3

      Fans are usually comparatively one of the least expensive things when buying new parts for a new build, one usually buys new fans because they're better performing or just look better or one just wants new fans. So over the years things like fans accumulate, I got loads of stuff in my spare parts collection in my 15+ years of building.

  • @jawshwaa
    @jawshwaa Před 6 lety +1

    one thing i would suggest , look up the pinout of a 3 pin fan header , cause theyre always the same . better to do a little research then to potentially fry a component or usb port , and not have so many bare wires laying around ,.......or you can do what i did , hook up a fan controller to a spare psu, and plug in as many fans as possible!

  • @jamesmallon854
    @jamesmallon854 Před 6 lety +1

    You could hook it entirely up to a Raspberry Pi: IIRC they have a 12v pin and if you connected the 4 pins from the RGB input for the fan to outputs from the Pi, you could code your own RGB lightshow.

  • @aveenashramlal1930
    @aveenashramlal1930 Před 6 lety +3

    First

  • @badger67
    @badger67 Před 6 lety

    Good job mate. Looks the business.
    Tip for you, always tin the cables first as in put some solder on them before you join them onto whatever you solder, and always clean the tip after every application.
    You ought to do more stuff like this.

  • @johnmarstonduchisbad649

    Summer yea temps roaring yea huge usb fans sick

  • @johntotten4872
    @johntotten4872 Před 6 lety

    You are now even more cool in my book Kyle.

  • @FatahChan
    @FatahChan Před 6 lety

    when you run out of ideas and products, diy comes to the rescue

  • @bud009m
    @bud009m Před 6 lety

    in a class me and a partner made a dc to dc step up circuit and had a pcb made to mount everything. ours was about twice the size of what you have there. and we were able to run computer fans, large led arrays, and even an electric motor. we did find that by stepping up the input the trade off was less current in the output so larger motors for like rc cars were a no go.

  • @TheCIScommander
    @TheCIScommander Před 6 lety

    I love that you called the weather "ambient temperatures" lol

  • @TheLiznaith
    @TheLiznaith Před 6 lety

    it looks quite stylish tbh

  • @Kemia_
    @Kemia_ Před 6 lety

    I literally did this by taking the power wires from a USB and tieing them together to a case fan. No solder or anything. Literally works just as good

  • @jeppewerring
    @jeppewerring Před 6 lety

    I did this with a phanteks case fan because I didn't want to go to the store to buy a fan, I used a Laptop charger hardwired though so it definitely spins faster than what it's rated for.

  • @TSLMachine
    @TSLMachine Před 6 lety

    If you're going to use this fan to cool you down some while you're on your [desktop] computer, how about just using some extension cables and just plug them in the tower itself and have those wires sticking out of the case to the fan? If plugged into the motherboard/PWM fan hub, you can control the fan RPM as desired (I guess you can do it with that potentiometer-like doodad you got to up your USB voltage, and even pump more than 12V to make the thing spin faster). You can extend the RGB cable too so your fan can give you more FPS.

  • @milaandahiya
    @milaandahiya Před 6 lety +4

    I like these kind of videos, you should do more of these lol!

  • @Tekillyah
    @Tekillyah Před 2 lety

    Got a 200mm Phanteks fan lying around, might try this.

  • @WarriorBoy123
    @WarriorBoy123 Před 6 lety

    Congrats on 1 mil bro

  • @theatomicfriendsshow
    @theatomicfriendsshow Před rokem

    Sweet video to come across! We've been tinkering with PC fans used outside of the PC to great success. Fun video! 👍

  • @MrZombie999
    @MrZombie999 Před 6 lety

    Inplace of taping that part up you can get small boxes that would be better plus some would have added a on/off switch

  • @panserbj0rn
    @panserbj0rn Před 5 lety

    Now flip the fan, put a HEPA filter on top and you got yourself a vape vapor filter. Avatar VapeNut vape filter costs 90$ and is basically the same thing in a case with an on/off switch. Ordered my step up boards for 0.48$ a piece, have an extra fan and an extra USB cable. To quote Ron Swanson: "People who buy things are idiots".
    Huge thanks for making the video!

  • @Gameplay-3D
    @Gameplay-3D Před 6 lety

    If you flip the wires over you could change the rotation of the fan as to have the face of the fan looking up instead of the back of the fan

  • @RsBlackleo86
    @RsBlackleo86 Před 6 lety

    I actually wanted to do this myself but was to lazy to lookup a tutorial. This is also a good budget option for those who want to start soldering and need a fan to blow away the possibly toxic fumes.

  • @lacucaracha111111
    @lacucaracha111111 Před 6 lety +1

    one thing you can use for a stand is a metal rod that fits through the screwholes , bend it 90! twice in the right spots, poke it through the holes, angle it upwards, done

  • @turbotrainer1
    @turbotrainer1 Před 4 lety

    u just gave me a brilliant idea to put my old cm 200mm fan to use next summer ty!

  • @nfsankit
    @nfsankit Před 6 lety +2

    "Tinkering with your hardware " xD

  • @Inso_yuugen
    @Inso_yuugen Před 6 lety

    Wait, this is pretty hecking cool

  • @stug45
    @stug45 Před 4 lety

    before snipping the cable off, check it from the standard 3 pin layout

  • @mello.-.6516
    @mello.-.6516 Před 6 lety

    This is my favorite PC builder I watch him everyday bc how he does things

  • @woooweee
    @woooweee Před 5 lety

    They also sell ac to 3 pin fan header adapters, usually with two headers so two fans.

  • @angelme5692
    @angelme5692 Před 6 lety

    Hey Kyle... I'd like to share something with you: If you connect a PWM fan with inverted polarity, the fan won't spin. If you then connect it with proper polarity, the fan will spin at very low RPM (propably only 25% of maximum potential). If you experince something like that, worry not! Just invert the polarity once again and then invert it back to proper polarity. The fan should spin at 100% now :3 (Please note that this may be a "lie" xD Because I have only experienced that once, and after "fixing" the fan speed, I didn't try it again, because I was afraid I might fry the fan :3 )

  • @lacrosse8011
    @lacrosse8011 Před 6 lety

    Literally perfect timing. I'm moving to Las Vegas in 2 weeks so thank you!! Also side note, anyone have advice on getting my PC out their from the east coast? I'm shipping my car then flying out their. Please keep in mind its ave 115 degrees Fahrenheit there now.

  • @ankitbarman005
    @ankitbarman005 Před 6 lety

    You backdrop pc is so gorgeous yes so simple. Reminds me of Pam from office.

  • @Kwalafied42
    @Kwalafied42 Před 6 lety

    YOOO what power bank is that????? Looks really cool and slim!

  • @stricklybiz1
    @stricklybiz1 Před 5 lety

    you will have cold soldering joint later > you didn't let the solder cling to the contact point long enough. but it will work for a while. still a good video!

  • @kkahandal
    @kkahandal Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this DIY. I'll try this DIY to cool my router.

  • @clintk4691
    @clintk4691 Před 6 lety

    Cool idea. Just gave me a new project for my 3D printer.

  • @LeonardChurch33
    @LeonardChurch33 Před 6 lety

    Hey Kyle, Walmart sells an RGB strip with a usb controller for ~$5. It's made for adding ambient light to the back of a TV but it should have no problem controlling that fan.

  • @Jhare93
    @Jhare93 Před 6 lety

    Cant say ive tried anything like this, but i am working on a DIY cell singal booster with an old sattelite dish thr project is apmost done, but this DIY pc desk fan would be so helpful in my hot ambient environment i already have an AIO cooler in my chasity, and on my floor have a box fan blowing towards me and my pc at all times on high. I love to tinker Kyle i love this idea! I have no idea how to solder myself either but i am going to be working on another diy project by taking apart an hdtv and replacing a dead capacitor i just need myself a ifixit kit,soldering iron,and multimeter.

  • @basgubbels
    @basgubbels Před 6 lety

    Tip: Keep some more cable on the connector side for soldering it back if you would even want to do that

  • @jcx-200
    @jcx-200 Před 6 lety

    I’m tempted to do something similar but to cool off my router a bit. Will probably need to make a DIY stand

  • @GerdLPluu
    @GerdLPluu Před 6 lety

    Let the solder dry. Good one.