The Gigabyte utility is pretty useless IMHO. Of those I have tried, HWinfo64 is my favourite for reading values, but none (that I know of) allow fan speed control. Its a Gigabyte MB, and I think they deliberately restrict access to info about it - shame! But clearly some people have the necessary know-how, as multiple hardware monitors can work with it. I was disappointed to be unable to discover anything helpful about my current multi-io chip (IT 8686E) that would enable me to read it, so have not pursued the matter. This was the feature i was looking for, because maximum silence. This guide will include how to set the fans up to a temp curve, and also how to completely turn them off. After that is ready, open it, it installs very easy, next next next style, and then open it. ![]() A few years back I was sufficiently motivated by SF's results to write my own program (in C) to access my multi-io chip (Winbond W83627) - this was easy enough (reading from and writing to io ports) as I found io chip info on-line - and I got exactly the values that SF did (no calibration involved at all). First off, you wanna download the installer, from /speedfan.php. Same here on my latest PC (late 2018), but otherwise works on all vns of Windows I have tried, including W10. Speedfan hasn't been updated in many years now, to the point where it hasn't supported my last two motherboards.
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