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MAINGEAR Support
help.maingear.com › maingear support › knowledge base › how to set recommended fan curves (msi)
How to set recommended fan curves (MSI) - MAINGEAR Support
April 20, 2026 - Restart your computer and repeatedly press the Delete key as it boots to enter the BIOS. Select HARDWARE MONITOR on the right side of the screen. To set the curve select the fan (CPU 1, Chassis 1, System 1, etc...), click on the temperature number/percentage.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › tip for new builders: case and cpu fan curves
r/buildapc on Reddit: Tip for new builders: Case and CPU Fan Curves
November 20, 2019 -

When you set your fan speeds in the BIOS after building your PC for the first time - if you're working with a modern motherboard/bios - you'll likely have access to a tool that resembles a graph with dots on it, where the Y-axis is fan speed in % of max speed and the X-axis is temperature values in degrees celcius. This is, if you are using PWM fans (fans that change speed based on temperature information sent from the motherboard), the most straightforward way to set up your fan profiles. A profile determined by dots you place on the graph will tell the fan under what conditions (i.e. at what temperatures) to spin at a certain percent of max speed.

Here's my observation - fan speed changes are more distracting than (relatively) loud fans. And my suggestion: Don't make a straight or consistently ascending line on the graph, for example 40 degrees = 30% speed, 50 degrees = 40% speed, 60 degrees = 70% speed, and 70 degrees = 100% speed. Don't do this because the result will be that your fans constantly speed up and slow down dynamically as the temperature changes under normal usage at safe temperatures. This is, for me, much more distracting than having the fans run consistently at one speed a bit faster/louder. Here's what I've done instead:

In my bios fan control settings there are four dots on the graph and a graph for each fan. I've set all of the fan graphs up as follows: (point 1) 0 degrees celcius = 50% speed; (point 2) 60 degrees celcius = 50% speed. These two values ensure that the fan runs at 50% the majority of the time - namely when the CPU temperature is anywhere between 0 and 60 degrees celcius. This is both quiet enough for me and keeps the temperatures around 35 degrees at idle. The fan speed doesn't change at all up until the CPU reaches 60 degrees, which is the max temperature I've observed any CPU core to reach under normal non-gaming or rendering workloads with the fans at 50%. So to summarise: now, most of the time the fans are running at 50% speed and the CPU temps are below 60 degrees; Next, the last two dots are set with CPU intensive scenarios in mind. The third point is 65 degrees = 75% speed (could be 80% speed if you're worried about thermal runaway, or 70% speed if you want it to be a bit quieter at this temperature, there's room for adjustment here), and the fourth 70 degrees = 100% speed. The reason for this 10 degree span is twofold: For one, this is the temperature range which is easily handled by my cooling solution with fans at close to full speed when the CPU is at 100% utilisation. This is also (70c) the max temperature I would prefer my CPU to run at for longer duration, although it is well below throttling temp and even 10 degrees below the widely assumed safe operating temp for my chip. Just an aside, putting both latter values (graph dots) at 70 degrees = 100% speed should have had the same effect, as the fan speed would increase linearly by 100% over 10 degrees in either scenario. I just like to use all the dots.

These values are an example. EDIT: as other users have pointed out, the fact that these values work for me doesn't mean they'll be perfect for your cooling setup. They could be a bit too relaxed if your chip is quite hot in general or too aggressive from a noise standpoint if the CPU tends to briefly fluctuate above 60 degrees under medium workloads. END EDIT. The key to quiet fans is to prevent them from switching speed at lower, "safe" temps, and instead to have them aggressively ramp up when the temperature goes over whatever value you're comfortable having the CPU run at over a longer period of time. Note, this isn't my approach with my graphics card, there I'm a bit more focused on avoiding thermal runaway and tend to have the card fans ramp up to 100% long before any thermal throttling would occur, as well as have them run faster at lower temps to prevent the near-throttle temps from ever occurring. In general, a graphics card will reduce its processing speed (core and/or memory clocks) before it hits a safe thermal limit - for my rx 480 the performance throttling temperature is 83 degrees, but the "safe" max temp is over 90. CPU's won't thermal throttle their processing capability (clock speed) based on temperature until they reach unsafe temperatures, so the motivation for fan speed curves is different for these two different scenarios.

EDIT: update 11.02.2020, Ryzen 2 CPUs WILL throttle their boost clocks long before reaching unsafe temp levels. For example, my CPU is at 65° under an all core 100% load, my boost clock on all cores is about 3990-4000mhz; my CPU is at 70° in the same scenario, the CPU boosts to 3950mhz. This may also be the case with intel CPU "turbo boost" level clocks. So it's up to you to ascertain if this is the case and then choose a performance and noise level you're comfortable with if you want your CPU to consistently boost as high as it can with your respective thermal solution (CPU cooler).

What a CPU still won't do is drop below stock clock speeds until it hits unsafe temps (thermal throttling), and in this way it is similar to gfx cards whose algorithms consider core/memory load as well as temperature to decide when to boost above stock ("boost clock", "game clock" or whatever your GPU AIB chooses to call the above stock overclock).

Just thought I should update this because I wrote it long before experimenting with my r5 3600 and the case cooling. Spending an inordinate amount of money on good airflow+static pressure fans nets me about a 50mhz all core boost clock with an aggressive fan curve by keeping CPU temps between 60-65 at max utilisation. Wasn't worth it.

Hope this helps some people out there, happy building :)

Late edit: Link to second post with additional information on fan curves.

Discussions

Help regarding Fan Curves and recommended settings in the BIOS ?
Hello, I recently updated my BIOS and forgot that profiles needs to be saved to a USB stick, so everything has kind of gone back to defaults. I would like some help with the recommended settings in the BIOS and help with fan curves if possible. PC Specs Case: Fractal Design North XL Midtower... More on forums.tomshardware.com
🌐 forums.tomshardware.com
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0
February 7, 2026
Fan curve in the BIOS
I set the fans to approx. 25% up to 75°C. Then first flat, then steeply rising to 100°C. The pump runs at 30% before the curve rises. This is completely sufficient to cool the 7800X3D well and everything remains pleasantly quiet. Here is a screenshot from the MSI Center. However, I set it up like this in the BIOS: More on reddit.com
🌐 r/PCBaumeister
11
1
January 23, 2025
Advice re fan curves...iCue software or Bios?
I would use icue because you can set temps based on sensors that are aren't available on motherboard such as coolant temp. Yes, no reason to close the software considering it controlling your RGB as well Y60 has side fans, not front fans. On my own build I have tied radiator (side) fans to coolant temp and top/rear/bottom fans to a physical temperature probe placed inside the GPU connected to the AIO commander. In your case since your rad is mounted as top exhaust I'd recommend linking that to coolant and the rest to either GPU, coolant or to a physical probe like mine (CPU temp sensor and GPU temp sensor fluctuate too much so you'd constantly be hearing your fans spin up and down) More on reddit.com
🌐 r/Corsair
6
1
February 22, 2024
Need help with Fan curve settings in BIOS / Z690 M... - Republic of Gamers Forum - 892805
Hello Everyone Need help with Fan curve settings in BIOS for a more silent use of my PC please. My Components: -ASUS Z690 Maximus Extreme Board -ASUS ROG-STRIX-RTX3080TI-O12G-GAMING Graphic card -ASUS ROG Strix LC II 360 AIO cooler -Lian Li o11 dynamic xl Case (ROG cert.) More on rog-forum.asus.com
🌐 rog-forum.asus.com
January 29, 2023
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MSI
forum-en.msi.com › home
Guide: How to set up a fan curve in the BIOS
TPM disappears on first boot after long shutdown - BitLocker recovery + Code 45 + “No TPM device found” in BIOS (Modern 14 H / D13MG)
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Noctua
noctua.at › en › support › faqs › how-do-i-optimise-my-fan-settings
FAQ: How do I optimise my fan settings? | Noctua
Therefore, for use in a PC, we ... optimise your fans’ sound and performance, we recommend setting a manual fan curve in the BIOS after setting up your PC....
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XDA Developers
xda-developers.com › home › other hardware › 5 reasons why you should set custom fan curves in bios
5 reasons why you should set custom fan curves in BIOS
March 20, 2025 - These are known as fan curves as the higher the temperature of your PC or specific component, the faster the cooling will work to keep them within optimal ranges. While you could install some software for macOS, Linux, or Windows to alter these ...
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Overclock.net
overclock.net › home › forums › intel › intel cpus
How Would i Get my Fan Curve in UEFI Bios to look like Recommended | Overclock.net
Change "CPU Fan Speed Control" from "Normal" to "Custom", then drag the points on the curve to show a linear increase from 20% at 40C to 100% at 70C, or whatever.
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XDA Developers
xda-developers.com › home › other hardware › 5 hidden fan-curve tricks in modern uefi bios you probably missed
5 hidden fan-curve tricks in modern UEFI BIOS you probably missed
May 25, 2025 - Pulse width modulation enables finer control over how much power is supplied to the fan and how fast the motor spins at any given time. Most UEFI BIOS solutions for motherboards will allow you to take this a step further and fine-tune default fan curves, letting you set how fast each fan spins at for various temperature readings.
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Tom's Hardware Forum
forums.tomshardware.com › home › systems
Question - Help regarding Fan Curves and recommended settings in the BIOS ? | Tom's Hardware Forum
February 7, 2026 - That CPU fan curve is probably going to lead to your system being very loud for no real reason. The way I'd setup a curve with that CPU and those fans is leave the 40C @ 20% then 75C @ 50% and 90C @ 100%. ... FYI, I would avoid applying a profile saved from a previous BIOS version.
Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/pcbaumeister › fan curve in the bios
r/PCBaumeister on Reddit: Fan curve in the BIOS
January 23, 2025 -

Hi everyone, I've finished building my PC, it's running, and Windows 11 is installed.

Now the 9 fans are running at full speed, it's loud, the plants in the room are waving their leaves and I'll be cold shortly 😂.

I've already experimented a bit in the MSI BIOS. Fan curve etc. But honestly, I don't really know what's important. I have a 7800x3d and a Liquid Freezer III water cooling. 3 fans blow into the case and the rest out.

Can someone give me some tips or explain it for "dummies"? I've never done anything like this before.

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ARCTIC
support.arctic.de › pwm-settings
Fan Settings in UEFI - User Manual - ARCTIC
Windows 10 How to enter BIOS configuration ... Select the Fan that you want to adjust and to display the fan duty curve line in fan operating windows.
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LinkedIn
linkedin.com › all › pc building
How do you adjust the fan curves and profiles for a quieter CPU cooling?
November 22, 2023 - Once in the BIOS or UEFI, look for the fan control or monitor section, where you can see and adjust the fan curves and profiles for your CPU and other components.
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Cybersided
cybersided.com › home › fan curves: how to set them (the right way)
Fan Curves: How to Set Them (The Right Way) - Cybersided
September 17, 2021 - Adjusting fan curves can take a little time and patience. You’ll need to either install new software or dig into your computer’s BIOS, and you’ll probably need to tweak the fan curves a few times before you find one that works for you.
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Windows Forum
windowsforum.com › forums › windows help and support forums › windows news
Quiet PC Fans in Windows: Safe Tweaks, BIOS Curves, and Fan Control | Windows Forum
December 30, 2025 - These settings run at boot and apply even before an OS loads, making BIOS/UEFI the most reliable place to create conservative default fan behavior. Many boards include presets like Silent, Standard, and Performance/Turbo, plus the ability to build custom fan curves based on temperature sensors.
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PC Case Lab
pccaselab.com › home › pc guides › computer fan curves: how to customize, adjust and read
Computer Fan Curves: How To Customize, Adjust and Read
March 21, 2026 - The other half of the equation is choosing what temperature sensor will trigger the fan speed to increase, and a large number of builds do this incorrectly. Most BIOS setups will map fan speed curves using CPU temperature as their source.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/corsair › advice re fan curves...icue software or bios?
r/Corsair on Reddit: Advice re fan curves...iCue software or Bios?
February 22, 2024 -

Hi All

Got my first high end gaming PC a couple of weeks ago and feel the fans are louder than perhaps i imagined. I've not set any manual fan curves as of yet. I also think the machine is getting very warm (although haven't actual measurements to prove this). Couple of questions:

  1. Should i set the fan curves in the iCue software or the motherboard Bios?

  2. If in iCue do i always need the software open when using the PC for the curves to be active?

My spec is as follows:

Case - Hyte Y60

CPU - 7800x3d

GPU - MSI 4090

MB - Asus Z670-P

AIO Cooler - Corsair iCue H150i Elite Capel - set as exhaust

2x front case fans - Corsair iCue AF120 Elite set as intake

1x rear case fan - Corsair iCue AF120 Elite set as exhaust

2x pre installed case fans below the GPU - Flow FE12 3 pin fans - set as intake

Top answer
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I would use icue because you can set temps based on sensors that are aren't available on motherboard such as coolant temp. Yes, no reason to close the software considering it controlling your RGB as well Y60 has side fans, not front fans. On my own build I have tied radiator (side) fans to coolant temp and top/rear/bottom fans to a physical temperature probe placed inside the GPU connected to the AIO commander. In your case since your rad is mounted as top exhaust I'd recommend linking that to coolant and the rest to either GPU, coolant or to a physical probe like mine (CPU temp sensor and GPU temp sensor fluctuate too much so you'd constantly be hearing your fans spin up and down)
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Because you actually have a usefull sensor, water temp, icue is fine. If you did not have the cooler, then i would have suggest to use icue to see whwt would be the right fan curve for your noise/performance needs and then switch to bios control. As for the reason: even if i had an iverall nice experience with icue, there have been instances where it crashed (ussually, not its fault, at least in my pc) or lost control of the fans. The fans will ramp up when this happens. With bios, there no crash, no hang, no problems form other software etc. You set it and forget it. Overall, both aveanues are fine, it just that the bios one is the perfectly stable one while the other can be the same, but it can also have its issues or issues triggered by other stuff. Ps: run it woth icue, if do notice issues, switch to bios and be happy. Icue can still handle rgb in that case
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Asus
rog-forum.asus.com › t5 › intel-700-600-series › need-help-with-fan-curve-settings-in-bios-z690-maximus-extreme › td-p › 892805
Need help with Fan curve settings in BIOS / Z690 M... - Republic of Gamers Forum - 892805
January 29, 2023 - Z690 Hero, 12900K, BIOS 4505, MEI 2546.8.9.0, ME Firmware 16.1.40.2765, 7000X Case, RM1000x PSU, ASUS TUF OC 3090TI, 2 x 16GB Corsair RAM @ 5200MHz, Windows 11 Pro 25H2, Corsair H150i Elite AIO, 4x Corsair RGB fans, 3x M.2 NVME drives, 2x SATA SSDs, 2x SATA HDs. ... Simon - can you send some images of what settings/curves you have access to please?
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Tom's Hardware Forum
forums.tomshardware.com › home › cooling
[SOLVED] - Fan curve not working in BIOS at all ? | Tom's Hardware Forum
February 25, 2022 - If yes, note that it takes over control of your fan motors AND lights. So any settings you make in BIOS Setup will be changed to whatever iCUE is set to do. Use iCUE for your settings IF you have it installed. ... Hey guys, for some weird reason I am unable to edit the fan curves in BIOS.
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Tom's Hardware Forum
forums.tomshardware.com › home › cooling
Question - Case fans not following BIOS custom fan curve after booting to Windows | Tom's Hardware Forum
February 16, 2023 - I am not getting a RPM reading from the case fans either but I believe this is because the cable connecting the fan hub in the case to the motherboard doesn't have sufficient pins (it is 3 pin and missing the "Sense" pin). Now in the BIOS menu the custom fan curve is being applied to all fans, it's only when I boot to Windows 11 that this is being overidden and the case fans go back to their defualt settings.
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XDA Developers
xda-developers.com › home › other hardware › gaming pc running hot? a custom fan curve just unlocked performance you already paid for
Gaming PC running hot? A custom fan curve just unlocked performance you already paid for
May 5, 2026 - That's to play around with the fan curves in BIOS to get a higher RPM when the CPU is idle, plus shaping the curve to suit the acoustics of your fans, and the point at which your CPU goes out of idle temperature, so you don't have your fans ...