Guide: How to set up a fan curve in the BIOS

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Setting up a fan curve involves a balance between airflow and noise. But it is not that difficult when you know a good way to do it, and you only have to do it once.

First, a word about the fans. I'll try not to make it too difficult, there is just some precise terminology i have to use, but in the end it's not that hard to understand, i promise.

If you want to skip this part and go right to the information about setting up fan curves, scroll down to FAN CURVES.


There are two different types of fans, which you can tell apart by their plug. Let's look at this picture:

noctua_pin_configuration_12v_fans.png


A three-pin plug means the fan is DC (= direct current) voltage-controlled. A 4-pin plug means it's PWM (pulse width modulation) controlled.
With a DC-controlled fan, the fan speed is regulated by the board powering it with lower or higher voltages (say, between 3V and 12V) instead of steady 12V.
With a PWM-controlled fan, the board powers it with a steady 12V, and the fan speed is controlled through the fourth pin via a PWM signal.

Note: The "RPM Speed Signal" pin (rotations per minute) in the picture is telling the motherboard at which speed the fan is spinning, it is not controlling the fan.

So for each fan, you have to select the right fan control method: DC for a 3-pin fan or PWM for a 4-pin fan.


Beware: Some cheaper motherboard models may only allow DC control for most of the fan headers, or only allow PWM control for all of the fan headers, regardless of the fan headers all being 4-pin headers or not. This may save them a little money on components around the fan headers, but it can be very inconvenient if you have the wrong type of fans and you can't control them properly as a result. So pay extra attention to that.

It's easy to notice in the BIOS: When you can't control some 4-pin fan headers with a PWM signal and instead only have DC (voltage) control available. Or when you don't have the ability to set a DC voltage for the fans, and you can only set a PWM percentage (then, when using 3-pin fans, they would always run at full speed here, because they would get constant 12V).

But you can also find out about this in the manual, before purchasing such a board.
Two examples of such boards. First, a board where they saved money on two of the headers:

PWM DC.png


Both CPUFAN headers can control the fan speed via PWM signal or DC voltage (depending on the fan and which control method you select in the BIOS).
But the SYSFAN headers at the bottom can only control the fan speed via DC voltage, despite having a 4-pin fan header.
"NC" means Not Connected, so they didn't implement PWM control on those headers for cost-saving. On more expensive board models, all the fan headers should be able to control fans with both methods. But in this example, you'd want your 4-pin PWM fans on the two CPUFAN headers, if possible.

Second example, from the MSI PRO Z790-S WIFI, the worst Intel Z-series board on the market:

Screenshot 2024-12-31 at 12-55-46 PROZ790-SWIFI.pdf.png


This board simply doesn't offer DC Voltage control for any fan headers, only PWM control. So if you use 3-pin case fans (or CPU fans) on this board, since they don't have the fourth wire for the PWM speed control signal, they're stuck at a full 12V. There is no way to control 3-pin fans on this board at all, the fan curves will be useless for them. You need some kind of solution like a seperate fan controller, which some cases may offer.

These shortcomings are mostly on lower-end board models. Once you go for a slightly nicer board model (from lower mid-range onwards), they should be able to have all fan headers controlled in both ways, DC voltage or PWM.


By the way: Every PWM fan can also be DC-controlled, it's just a slightly worse method of controlling it. One advantage of PWM control is that the fan will always turn on, even at a very low setting (unless it's purposely configured to stay off below 5% or 20% PWM signal for example). But when you go too low with the voltage on DC control, the fan might not turn on reliably, as the voltage is not enough to overcome the fan motor's resistance, so you'd have to add a bit of extra margin on the voltage.

The general target for the fan curves is:
- Nice low RPM (fan speed) at low temperatures
- Let the RPM ramp up gently with rising temperatures
- Only ramping up the RPM faster when the temperature approaches a quite high level.


Now, before setting the fan curves: Since we're doing this in the BIOS, this is a good time to first update the BIOS to the newest version. Because if you decide to update the BIOS later, it will reset all settings (on a lot of boards, that includes the fan curves), and you have to enter everything again. But since we'll start from scratch now anyway, updating the BIOS beforehand is a good idea.

A quick how-to on BIOS updates:
1) Get the latest BIOS. It's always the topmost one when you click on "BIOS" on the MSI support page for the mainboard.
2) Extract the file and you will get a text file and the BIOS file. Put the BIOS file into the root folder of a USB stick/drive.
3) Enter the BIOS by pressing DEL during boot, go to "M-FLASH" in the BIOS.
4) Once M-Flash (the updater) is loaded, it will show a list of your drives. Select the USB stick and select the previously extracted BIOS file on there.
5) It will ask for confirmation and then update the BIOS. It's fully automatic from there, takes about two minutes.


Now, before we come to the topic of how to set good fan curves, let's first look at a proper way to create an airflow through the case. Normally there should be at least one intake fan (usually at the front) and at least one exhaust fan (usually at the rear, in line with the CPU cooler). This will ensure a defined airflow through the case which can extract the heat from the components.

All the fans should work in unison within that airflow, to get one stream of cold air coming in from the front, picking up some heat (mostly from the CPU and GPU), and the warmed-up air being exhausted out of the rear. So in modern cases, the airflow usually looks something like this:

airflow.png
master.png



Perhaps minus the fans on top of the case. But there often will be at least one fan (if not two or three) in the front, and one exhaust fan in the rear behind the CPU cooler. Each fan will have one or two arrow markings on one of the sides, showing the rotational direction as well as the airflow direction, and all the "airflow arrows" should be pointing towards the rear of the case. When the fans come pre-installed in the case, they will already be installed like that.

If the front intake fans outnumber the rear exhaust fan by 2:1 or 3:1, then the rear fan ideally runs on slightly higher RPM than the front fans, to create a more even airflow.

About over- vs. underpressure, or positive vs. negative pressure:

Usually there should be a slight overpressure / positive pressure, meaning, slightly more air intake than air exhaust. Because the problem with underpressure or negative pressure is, it can't be controlled where the air is being pulled from. So when there are more exhaust fans than intake fans (or there's more powerful exhaust fans, or they spin faster), they will usually pull air from the shortest path. Meaning, all the additional air does not come from the front, it will be pulled from every vent and case opening that is nearby.

But since we want a defined airflow, usually front-to-back/top, the best thing is to have a slight bias towards the intake fans. And most cases will naturally do that, as they tend to have more intake than exhaust fans. Then the exhaust fan should be on a slightly higher fan curve to spin a bit faster, but it's ok to still have some air blowing through the case vents below the rear exhaust fan, having the the front fans move slightly more air into the system than the exhaust fan alone can move out. Then the warm air that collects below the graphics card, or generally in the lower half of the system, can also slowly be replaced by fresh air as it exits through the rear case vents. You don't have to feel real wind coming through the vents, but it's good if the air is not totally stagnant, and you definitely don't want the air to be pulled in from there.



FAN CURVES

Now it's time to set the fan curves. Enter the BIOS (press DEL after power-on/reboot) and open the "Hardware Monitor" which offers the fan control.
For each fan, you can set four points of a curve, MSI calls this the "Smart Fan Mode".

This is how it might look:

MSI_SnapShot_21 Fan1.png


Note that each of the four points of a fan curve is restricted by the points next to it, it can't go lower than the previous point or higher than the following point.
So you may have to move a neighboring point if you hit a restriction on the point you want to adjust.


The goal for the first point of the curve is to find a setting with a bit of airflow, but where the fan is very quiet. This will be the setting when the CPU is doing nothing (idle).
You don't need a lot of airflow when the CPU temperature is low anyway. My fans spin only at around 400 RPM there, as you can see, just enough to keep some air moving through the case. Note that i have a high-end air cooler with two fans on there, as well as three 140mm case fans in a large case. So in a small case with fewer fans, you will need a bit higher RPM to keep it this cool inside. But there is no need to have the fans spin for example at 1000 RPM in idle.

For testing, it's good to open the case and put your hand behind the fan or behind the cooler (where the air gets blown through) to feel how much airflow the fan generates with different values. As long as you don't touch the motherboard or other components, there's no danger. And you can immediately feel the results of your adjustments.

For testing the airflow, turn off "Smart Fan Mode" for a while, so you can influence the fan speed directly. You can also turn off the other fans, so you can find the sweet spot for low temperatures with the particular fan you're checking. Remember, you only need a slight airflow for this starting point of the fan curve, the goal is not to have unnecessary noise when the temperature is low.

For this goal (a bit of airflow, but being very quiet), the resulting PWM % value (or DC voltage on 3-pin fans) is your starting point at 30°C or 40°C for this fan's curve. The temperature you select depends on where you want the fan to first start ramping up. It makes no sense to define a temperature below the ambient temperature, or below the minimum CPU temperature, you'd just be wasting the whole adjustment point. So anything below 30°C only makes sense with powerful cooling methods that can actually hold the CPU below 30°C.

Next, don't go to the second point, but the third one. Find a good level where the airflow is strong but the noise is still bearable, and use this as your "full CPU load" setting for higher temperature values like 65°C or 75°C. To fine-tune this point of the curve, you might have to go back and forth from the BIOS to Windows, where you monitor the fan speed with certain CPU load and fine-tune the setting afterwards. But it doesn't take that long to do, and you only have to do it once.

As for the second point of the curve, the inbetween point: Set it slightly below a straight line between the first and third point, to not make the fans ramp up too fast at medium temperatures.

For the final point, set it for 85°C or 90°C CPU temperature and 100% PWM value (or full 12V DC with a 3-pin fan). This is the "worst case" point for safety.
Now you should have all four points of the curve set to a sensible value, and most of the time, the fan should stay between the first and the third point. The highest last point is just a safety measure.

I would always create such an "ascending dominant" curve:

curve.png


A perfectly straight line makes no sense, you'd be wasting the two middle adjustment points.
A descending dominant curve makes no sense, as it will make more noise than necessary.

Here are examples. You might of course have to use different values, but just to see how it should rougly look like. The curve needs to be done for your particular fans.

This is for a PWM fan (4-pin), which is controlled by a PWM % signal:

BIOS_Fan1.png


I would always prefer "Temperature source" CPU for the CPU fan(s), and probably most other fans too.
Usually, the CPU temperature is the most important one, and will influence the other temperatures.
By the way, a "Step down time" of 1.0s makes the fans spin down less audibly.

However, it's also feasible use "Temperature source" System for case fans. Here's an example for a DC (voltage-controlled) 3-pin fan.
Note: The following picture is not how it should be set when using the CPU temperature as the source (which is the usual temperature source),
it's an example of a fan curve when using the System temperature as the source, which could be done for case fans.
When using CPU temperature as the source, the fan curve should not be this steep, it should be more like the pictures above.

MSI_SnapShot_24 Fan4.png


Of the six total fans in my PC (two on the CPU cooler, four in the case), this lower front intake fan is the only one for which i use the "System" Temperature Source. I want it to react to the system temperature with a steeper curve, since the system temperature will obviously increase much more slowly than the CPU temperature. The graphics card can be a major contributor to heating up the whole system, and since i can't use a graphics card sensor as the temperature source, this is sort of a roundabout way to handle that. Of course, you can also have the CPU as the temperature source for all the fans, then you should use a shallower curve like in the pictures before this one.

Here's a 4-pin system fan (in my case, a Noctua NF-A14 PWM) with the CPU as the temperature source:

23 Fan3 BIOS 1.D0 MSI_SnapShot_23.png


In my system, the CPU temperature actually stays very low under load, since i have a mid-range CPU and a high-end CPU cooler. Therefore, even for the system/case fans, i can set this steep of a fan curve and not worry about getting jet engine noises under load, it will still stay pretty quiet. Depending on the individual configuration, it might be better to have the system fans on less steep of a curve compared to the CPU fan(s), just so the noise is less annoying under load. It all depends on your setup, what kind of fans you have, and noise/temperature preference.

When you have a graphics card (GPU) with a pretty high power draw, and/or there will be a lot of gaming done on the PC, then it's also a good idea to observe the various temperatures during a stint of gaming, running HWinfo Sensors in the background, set up as mentioned in step 1) of this guide with the sensors expanded. Because apart from the CPU temperatures, the GPU and other temperatures (SSD, RAM, System...) are of course also important. A GPU can take quite high temperatures, and for some cards it's not unusual or concerning to see high 80°C there under load, that can be pretty normal. But it shouldn't cause excessive temperatures for other parts. So while thinking about achieving a good balance of temperatures vs. noise, it's good to keep the entire system in mind, for example in a gaming scenario, and not only test full CPU load.


Each fan model has a different RPM range and therefore needs different values or voltages to reach a certain airflow. Also, each different PWM-controlled fan model can interpret the PWM signal differently. This is because some mainboards don't allow a PWM signal lower than 20% for example, to never have the fan turn off. So to circumvent that, a fan maker might decide to let the fan interpret a 20% PWM signal from the mainboard as "still turned off", and turn on at 21% PWM. Another fan might interpret 0% PWM as the turn off signal and 1% as the lowest possible RPM, or may never turn off and just map the entire PWM signal range to the lowest and highest RPM. And all variations in between.

Here's an example of an Arctic fan which has implemented a semi-passive mode, it stays off with any PWM signal below 5%:

P12-PWM-PST-Argb-0dB-Mode-EN.jpg


These Arctic P12/P14 PWM PST are very good fans by the way, almost unbeatable in price/performance.

Another example of a fan with a semi-passive mode is this Noiseblocker one, which has the following PWM-signal-to-fan-speed mapping (depending on the variant):

Screenshot 2023-06-27 at 21-58-11 TData_eloopX120_de_en.cdr - TData_eloopX120_de_en.pdf.png


So for each fan model, you will need different PWM values (and for 3-pin ones, different voltages), but just go by airflow and noise.
And the concept of the fan curve is always the same.

Once you're done, it's a good idea to write down your settings or make a screenshot/picture of them (in the BIOS, F12 saves a screenshot to a FAT32-formatted USB drive).
Because whenever the BIOS settings are reset (due to BIOS update, CMOS Clear or empty battery), you'll need your notes or pictures to know what fan curves you had before.
Although in BIOS updates for newer boards, the fan curves are actually kept between updates nowadays, which is good.

My other guides:
RAM explained: Why two modules are better than four / single- vs. dual-rank / stability testing

Guide: How to set good power limits in the BIOS and reduce the CPU power draw
Guide: How to find a good PSU

Someone asked me if they can thank me for my work by sending me something via Paypal: Yes, that's possible, just write me a message and i'll tell you my Paypal 😉
 
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Hello everyone!
The new MSI BIOS'es feature fan groups. But I couldn't find any guide on how exactly they work and how to use them.
Any thoughts?
 

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Air pressure by itself doesn’t tell you much about how well air is actually moving. What really matters is airflow, because airflow is what carries heat away from your components. For example, if you place two fans in series (one after the other with a small gap), the pressure stays about the same, but the airflow can nearly double if there are no major losses.


When setting up cooling, start by checking whether your CPU cooler’s TDP rating (thermal design power) is high enough for your processor. Then, look at your temperatures during normal use. Ideally, your cooler should keep temps low even when fans spin at around 600 RPM, because higher speeds create more noise. More CPU cores generate more heat, so airflow becomes even more important.


Good case airflow is key. Make sure fresh air can enter the case and that hot air is directed away from the CPU instead of being sucked back in. Remember, hot air rises, so positioning fans to work with this natural flow will reduce turbulence and improve cooling efficiency.


Fan design also matters. Most of the air pressure happens at the tip of the blades, where air is pushed outward. This creates some turbulence, but less so inside a CPU cooler’s tightly packed fins. At 600 RPM you may not feel much pressure behind the fan, but you’ll notice the warm air. At 1000 RPM, the airflow will be much more obvious.


Finally, check that all fans are spinning in the same direction, especially if you have case fans working with CPU fans. And if you’re using air cooling, try to prevent hot air from your GPU from being pulled into the CPU cooler’s intake.
 
Air pressure by itself doesn’t tell you much about how well air is actually moving. What really matters is airflow, because airflow is what carries heat away from your components. For example, if you place two fans in series (one after the other with a small gap), the pressure stays about the same, but the airflow can nearly double if there are no major losses.


When setting up cooling, start by checking whether your CPU cooler’s TDP rating (thermal design power) is high enough for your processor. Then, look at your temperatures during normal use. Ideally, your cooler should keep temps low even when fans spin at around 600 RPM, because higher speeds create more noise. More CPU cores generate more heat, so airflow becomes even more important.


Good case airflow is key. Make sure fresh air can enter the case and that hot air is directed away from the CPU instead of being sucked back in. Remember, hot air rises, so positioning fans to work with this natural flow will reduce turbulence and improve cooling efficiency.


Fan design also matters. Most of the air pressure happens at the tip of the blades, where air is pushed outward. This creates some turbulence, but less so inside a CPU cooler’s tightly packed fins. At 600 RPM you may not feel much pressure behind the fan, but you’ll notice the warm air. At 1000 RPM, the airflow will be much more obvious.


Finally, check that all fans are spinning in the same direction, especially if you have case fans working with CPU fans. And if you’re using air cooling, try to prevent hot air from your GPU from being pulled into the CPU cooler’s intake.
Air and the thermal design power are some new aspects to me considering the fan I use have less noise in mind, bearable at 850rpm for working, I tested that in bios but my processor is dropping to hard 38c then rising back to 50-55c, all right along a browser connected to the 800 rpm average for Intake fans and 850 exhaust, or aio running below those case fans to cool the cpu , should my aio on the cpu fans be spinning at the intake or exhaust to change that by adding 150 rpm’s to 700 idle to mid load on the fans for the water cooler or drop the fans to kick in at 600 for all day use up to 30/60celcius two points with that way I have to eliminate fan revving on day tasks. And 40-48c range opppsed to a 38-55range temp.
 
You don't need room temperature at the CPU, it is perfectly normal having temperature between 30 and 40°C... even more. So you have an AIO… I didn't know. Liquid cooling have a prefer way of mounting, check the fabric documentation. In my aware, there is no case where you can blow hot air at the outlet of the CPU. Would be better, it finds it's way out of the case. For liquid cooler, the front of the case (vertical) is the place where you can separate air and 'water'. You don't want to get air in to the pump. So the return needs to be below that. I like to keep the fan speed at the same rpm, even when the temperature goos up and down when boosting. And when it goos up for high demanding tasks like video encoding or some games, you want to kick in at 60°C, CPUs are build to stay below 85°Cm even when TDP is set.
 
i did not understand liquid aio cooler for my case change, some temps were 63 but benchmark cinebench ran 67 temperatures. going up in rpm at 63 was set basically for the cooler to reach its max however that was software controlled via linked to cpu_fan header, not motherbaord controlled, so the case motherboard control for the set rpm of the aio in system is chained to a graph Device memory mode to keep the cpu on it package temp and cooling are definately below 85C, in Precision boost ryzen overdrive, the am4 socket keeps demanding games and high tasks running cool, just the medium tasks graph in bios im trying to set since i can control it at pbo with cooler fans at 39 c then hard to estimate this if im using 800 rpm for all the case and 700 rpm for all aio on top warm air selected is going out but how am i feeling the air if its just on basic windows with light apps with enough rpm jumping the package to high, no more than 8% cpu. partly went with people saying 750 rpm is enough so that was my attempt to quiet the system and it does not work well for using the rpms from 30c -50c which get to 900 or so on bios graph fan control.
 
In idle, you can have the fans as low as they are able to go, mine are below 500 RPM. The CPU doesn't care much if it's 30°C or 45°C, also, AMD CPUs will never idle at such low temperatures as you can see with Intel. You should definitely prioritize low noise in idle, and that also means less dust in the system over time, if they're not needlessly spinning too high when nothing is happening. I explain everything in the guide (including whether you want over- or under-pressure), if you read closely.
 
In the hardware monitor screen, what are the option on the top left for?
1764263383791.png

The "CPU CORE", "System", "MOS", "CHIPSET". Not my screen, but when clicking them in the BIOS I think they do nothing?
 
Most likely is that it's for the graph. You see the graph starting out at the right end of the fan curve window there, it is showing a temperature and the fan RPM. So with those buttons you probably select which temperature is shown in that graph.
 
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