

Press the dual zone button or adjust the passenger set point normally if dual zone operation is desired without a passenger present. The system remains in dual zone operation until you switch the vehicle off. If there is not an occupant in the front passenger seat, the climate control system may default to single zone in order to improve fuel economy (if you were previously in dual zone operation). When this occurs, dual zone turns off and the passenger set point changes to match the driver's set point. So that fan is on the same speed all the time and I have no idea if I can control the speed of it.Select a temperature for the passenger’s side using the rotary control on the passenger’s side. Single zone temperature control automatically switches off. The temperature on the driver’s side remains unchanged. You can now adjust the driver’s side and passenger’s side temperatures independently. The display shows the temperature settings for each side. It will won’t connect to the splitter because it has grab pins on either side of the connector and clip at the top, right in the middle that will only connect to the front panel connector that has the correct slot.
OPRIMUM MACS FAN CONTROL SETTINGS PC
The only thing bugging me is the original fan that came with the PC has a different type of connection because it’s RGB. Seems to be working so far and the PC is really quiet until I start playing a game. These fans don’t kick in until the CPU hits around 60c. I’ve changed the curve on that header to kick in when the GPU fan kicks in to keep air flowing. So I’ve daisy chained a few splitters and have 3 fans running off 1 header. I only have 2 more fan headers on my mobo and 1 of them is being used by the AIO pump, which from what I’ve read, should be on 100% all the time. I’ve left the CPU fan curves at the default level and ticked the box for smart fan. Mode) on the right of the screen there is a hidden menu that pops out when you move the mouse over to it, select hardware monitor, you can adjust all of your fan curves in there, you can select for each fan which temp you want it to ramp up and down with, ie CPU, Chipset etc, select the fan at the top of the screen you want to adjust, now on the left youll see the option to select what temp you want the fan to run with, make sure to select the smart fan tick box, adjust the curve accordingly. In the bios > Advanced Mode (F7 if your not already in Adv. Mode) on the right of the screen there is a hidden menu that pops out when you move the mouse over to it, select hardware monitor, you can adjust all of your fan curves in there, you can select for each fan which temp you want it to ramp up and down with, ie CPU, Chipset etc, select the fan at the top of the screen you want to adjust, now on the left youll see the option to select what temp you want the fan to run with, make sure to select the smart fan tick box, adjust the curve accordingly.Īs im water cooling I have all of my radiator fans connected to the CPU fan header via a basic fan controller which supplies power to the fans via an SATA connector, the CPU fan header just supplies the PWM signal side of things, im running AMD RyZen, the temps even at idle seem to jump around a bit, so I have 0oC = 42%, 60oC = 42%, this keeps my fans running at around 800rpm all the way up to 60oC on the CPU, this also keeps them completely quite, then the next step up is 70oC = 75% and then finally 80oC = 100%, works perfectly fine for me, this is just a guideline and you may have to tinker with those yourself for what suits your system best.

Click to expand.In the bios > Advanced Mode (F7 if your not already in Adv.
