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Forum Discussion
sdct989
Mar 21, 2022Tutor
GS324TP 1.0.0.38 Firmware Spins Up Fan Frequently
I'm not sure if anyone else has noticed this or not, but with firmware 1.0.0.38 my GS324TP switch seems to spin up the fan for about 15 - 30 seconds every 5 minutes. I've monitored the heat of the un...
- Mar 21, 2022
So after I posted this, I decided to do some more investigation with the firmware. It turns out, that this is the result of heat build up, it's just that the heat build up happens on such an obscure interval that I became convinced that it was some sort of timer.
When I measured it, the fan turns on whenever my MAC temp sensor gets to a temperature of 51C and then it stays on until the temperature goes down to 45C. For my unit, this happens every 5 minutes on the dot.
It turns out, that my unit normally sits at 53C when it runs under 1.0.0.30 which it still labels as normal, but this triggers the fan as of 1.0.0.34 which appears to be related to the bug in the release notes for that release https://kb.netgear.com/000062955/GS324T-GS324TP-Firmware-Version-1-0-0-34:
- Modifies fan behavior so that the fan now activates at low speed at a lower temperature threshold.
Anyway, not sure if that's really that bad, but I guess there's no bug here, its just that the threshold changed for most likely good reasons.
I'll try to find some alternative cooling solutions that aren't quite as loud as the internal fans on the device.
sdct989
Mar 21, 2022Tutor
So after I posted this, I decided to do some more investigation with the firmware. It turns out, that this is the result of heat build up, it's just that the heat build up happens on such an obscure interval that I became convinced that it was some sort of timer.
When I measured it, the fan turns on whenever my MAC temp sensor gets to a temperature of 51C and then it stays on until the temperature goes down to 45C. For my unit, this happens every 5 minutes on the dot.
It turns out, that my unit normally sits at 53C when it runs under 1.0.0.30 which it still labels as normal, but this triggers the fan as of 1.0.0.34 which appears to be related to the bug in the release notes for that release https://kb.netgear.com/000062955/GS324T-GS324TP-Firmware-Version-1-0-0-34:
- Modifies fan behavior so that the fan now activates at low speed at a lower temperature threshold.
Anyway, not sure if that's really that bad, but I guess there's no bug here, its just that the threshold changed for most likely good reasons.
I'll try to find some alternative cooling solutions that aren't quite as loud as the internal fans on the device.
- wvisserMar 22, 2022Guide
Here are a couple of things you might try before replacing the fans.
- If possible, try mounting the switch vertically with the fan side pointing up. This will allow the switch to better dissipate heat naturally without using the fans.
- Try using some of the green features (System->Green Ethernet->Green Ethernet Interface Configuration). Put all the ports into auto power down and also enable EEE mode for all ports. If you have a significant number of unused ports, this will reduce the switch's power consumption and therefore might reduce how often the fans come on.
I did both of these things on the same switch and now my fans do not come on at all using firmware 1.0.0.38.
Wayne
- sdct989Mar 22, 2022Tutor
Thanks for the response and the advice!
I just enabled the green ethernet features and it appears that the switch is using about 25% less power and it seems to be dropping a few degrees as well. I'll keep an eye on it and see if this resolves my problem without needing an external fan.
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