

If you were to for some reason want to power the fans from the motherboard, then those could go on CPU/OPT and the H110i on AIO/W_Pump. If you were to put it on AIO or W_Pump, you would still need to stick a fan on CPU_FAN to prevent the boot error that occurs on all systems when that slot if empty. That cooler takes it's power from the SATA power line and the motherboard connector reports a pump speed. Behind the heatsink, youll also find three fan headers for the CPU cooler, one of which is designed for liquid cooler pumps.

ASUS ROG STRIX X570-I chassis fan headers detecting as AIO pump Build Help I have two. So while you could put the cable from the H110i on AIO or W_Pump, it doesn't really matter on the H110i. I wouldnt have 100 fan speed on the pump - usally a noisy option. There are usually multiple ways to set most things up. Always look at the cooler's instructions, then compare it to how your motherboard functions. Asus' manuals are always short in description and light on detail. There are different types of coolers and different ways to connect them. On some coolers this is critical, but less so on the H110i. By increasing the speed at which the memory runs, you can boost the performance of your. This prevents other Asus BIOS or fan tuning programs from attempting to change the speed of something it cannot (the H110i). The motherboard supports overclocking the RAM to a higher speed. Asus also uses "Full Speed" to describe the locked to 100% state. "Disabled" is one of the more universal terms. Different motherboard makers use different terms to describe this. The pump needs the maximum 12v (100% fan control) at all times. Disabling CPU Fan (or any other header) does not prevent the fan from running, it only prevents the speed control from functioning.
