How to control fan speed

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Revision as of 15:36, 16 December 2006 by Theclaw (Talk | contribs) (Supported models)
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This page discusses methods for controlling the system fan.

For Linux

Using a patched kernel

ATTENTION!
This patch is superceded by the patches in ibm-acpi Git repository

The Patch for controlling fan speed provides a convenient interface via /proc/acpi/ibm/fan.

Manual speed control can be done through the patch for controlling fan speed:

#cat /proc/acpi/ibm/fan
status:         enabled
level:          auto
speed:          4219
commands:       enable, disable, level <level>
                (<level> is 0-7, auto or disengaged)

#echo level 2 > /proc/acpi/ibm/fan

#cat /proc/acpi/ibm/fan
status:         enabled
level:          2
speed:          3142
commands:       enable, disable, level <level>
                (<level> is 0-7, auto or disengaged)

Using a stock kernel

If you have the ibm-acpi module loaded with experimental=1, you can control the fan without patching the kernel by directly writing to the relevant embedded controller register using /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump.

For example:

# echo 0x2F 0x00 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (fan off)

# echo 0x2F 0x02 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (low speed)

# echo 0x2F 0x04 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (medium speed)

# echo 0x2F 0x07 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (maximum speed)

# echo 0x2F 0x80 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (automatic - default)

# echo 0x2F 0x40 > /proc/acpi/ibm/ecdump (disengaged)

See the specifications below for the meaning of these modes.

On/off control using stock kernel

If you only wish to turn the fan on and off (with automatic control when it's on), you can use the following.

When loading ibm-acpi v0.11 with experimental switch (# modprobe ibm_acpi experimental=1), it is possible to read and write the status of fan:

#cat /proc/acpi/ibm/fan
status:         enabled
speed:          3580
commands:       enable, disable

#echo disable > /proc/acpi/ibm/fan

cat /proc/acpi/ibm/fan
status:         disabled
speed:          0
commands:       enable, disable

When off, the fan will then never wake up. It is advised to use an automated control script to reduce the chance of hardware damage.

Automated control scripts

An ACPI fan control script can be to override the firmware's fan algorithm with gentler, quieter version. It monitors the laptop's thermal sensors and sets the fan speed accordingly, according to customizable thresholds. For the default behavior, simply save the script as tp-fancontrol and run; note that this script requires you to modprobe the ibm_acpi module as "modprobe ibm_acpi experimental=1"
# ./tp-fancontrol

For Windows

Shimodax's ThinkPad fan control tool offers similar functionality (see forum discussion at thinkpads.com). Source and binaries are available through the "Tp4xFanControl" project on SourceForge.

Hardware specs

The following hardware behavior was discovered experimentally by Thinker and neither provided by nor confirmed by IBM/Lenovo. The following description may be inaccurate and may vary by model (see list of models above). The terminology probably does not match the one used by IBM/Lenovo engineers.

NOTE!
Information on other models is included in the ibm-acpi Git version.

ACPI DSDT register _SB.PCI0.LPC.EC.HFSP (8 bits, offset 0x2F in the EmbeddedController address space, accessed through the standard EC interface at IO ports 0x62 and 0x66) is read/writable and has the following meaning:

Bits   7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
       ---------------
Value  1 0 * * * * * *  - automatic
       * 1 * * * * * *  - disengaged
       0 0 N N N N N N  - manual (0..63; 0=disable fan, 1=min, ..., 7=max)

In automatic mode, the embedded controller sets the fan speed automatically according to system temperatures and some unknown algorithm.

In manual mode, the fan level is forced to the given value and the EC will auto-regulate the fan to maintain at a (roughly) constant RPM, which is model-dependent. Manual speed levels 8-63 yield the same behavior as level 7, and the the ACPI DSDT uses level 7 for the emergency mode it enters upon critical CPU/GPU temperature, so apparently 7 is the real maximum level.

In disengaged mode, the embedded controller does not read the fan RPM (hence EmbeddedController offset 0x84 is not updated), and does not maintain a stable fan speed. When disengaged mode is entered the fan speed is not immediately changed (except if the fan was disabed, in which case it is turned on at a low level). However, once in disengaged mode, fan speed will slowly increase to beyond the maximum manual level (this may cause hardware damage!).

NOTE!
The "disengaged" mode has a different behaviour on ThinkPad A31 than that described above. As above, the fan speed increases beyond the levels of the regular 0-7 speed settings. However, the speed increase is fairly instantaneous (the change being as fast as the transition between any other two speed levels, except 0 (off) which seems faster, i.e. immediate); and the fan speed reading is continuously available while in "disengaged" mode. In the A31, the speed reaches about 4000 RPM as listed in the table below.

After boot, the HFSP register may not reflect the true state of the EC (on some models it reads 0x07 even though the EC is actually in automatic mode).

Hint:
Apparently the pulsing fan noise experienced by some users can be cured by repeatedly running 2-4 seconds of manual control followed by 0.5-1 seconds of disengaged mode. The pulse occurs when the the embedded controller computes the fan speed and adjusts the fan voltage adaptively every few seconds (~4.8sec for the ThinkPad T43); the aforementioned mode switching doesn't give it a chance to do so. One of the ACPI fan control scripts implements this solution.

Supported models

The above was successfully tested on the following models:

  • ThinkPad T43, T43p (fan levels RPM: 1-2 = ~3300, 3-5 = ~4100, 6-7 = ~4700; disengaged mode works)
  • ThinkPad T42, T42p (fan levels RPM: 1-2 = ~2900, 3-5 = ~3700, 6-7 = ~4700; disengaged mode works at ~5200)
  • ThinkPad T41, T41p (fan levels RPM: 1-2 = ~2980, 3-5 = ~3500, 6-7 = ~4050; disengaged mode works at ~5100)
  • ThinkPad T40 (fan levels RPM: 1-2 = ~2950, 3-5 = ~3600, 6-7 = ~4050)
  • ThinkPad T30
  • ThinkPad T22
  • ThinkPad T23 (low speed = ~2200, medium and maximum speed = ~4800; disengaged mode works at ~5800)
  • ThinkPad R52
  • ThinkPad R50 (highest manual level is 3; disengage mode works and reaches much higher RPM)
  • ThinkPad R50p (disengaged mode works at ~5100)
  • ThinkPad R51 (level 0 = off, level 1-2 = ~3150, level 3-5 = ~3350, level 6 = ~3750, disengaged = ~5100)
  • ThinkPad X30 (level 0 = off, low = ~3900, medium = ~4200, maximum = ~4650, disengaged = ~5900)
  • ThinkPad X31
  • ThinkPad X40
  • ThinkPad X41 Tablet
  • ThinkPad Z60t (fan levels RPM: 1-2 = ~1700, 3-5 = ~2800, 6-7 = ~3500)
  • ThinkPad Z60m (fan levels like Z60t)
  • ThinkPad Z61m
  • ThinkPad X60
  • ThinkPad A31 (fan levels RPM: 0 = off, 1-2 = ~3280-3380 (!), 3-5 = ~3200, 6-7 = ~3380, "disengaged" = ~4000 (see NOTE above))

Probably other models are supported too (please update this page if you confirm this).

Models using a different interface

The following models also work, use a different access method which supported (only) via the /proc/acpi/ibm/fan of ibm-acpi. No need for patching.

Unsupported models

  • ThinkPad 560 (these models don't have a fan)