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3-wire is: TACH, DC, GND

4-wire is: PWM, TACH, DC, GND

https://noctua.at/en/what-pin-configuration-do-noctua-produc...



In practice pwm is used instead of DC.


I can't remember the last time I encountered a motherboard that didn't offer you the choice between DC voltage and PWM for fan speed control. Both are still mainstream options; CPU heatsink fans are almost always 4-pin PWM fans but case fans are very commonly 3-pin DC fans. AIO Water cooling kits also commonly use 3-pin fans, especially when integrating their own fan controller or multiplexer so that they only need to occupy one or two fan headers on the motherboard.

(Edit: if you mean that in practice, the motherboard approximates DC voltage control using a PWM-based method, that may be true, but it's beside the point; a 3-pin fan is missing the control circuitry that a 4-pin PWM fan uses, and the 3-pin fan's behaviors like turn-on point will be specified in terms of DC voltage not PWM duty cycle, and you can't drive a 3-pin fan with the PWM signal intended for a 4-pin fan because the voltage and current supplied are both far too low.)




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