Hero999
Banned
110V fans are different to DC fans, they use induction motors while the latter uses a permanent magnet motor with an oscillator driving the coils.
You can generally safely over-voltage most fans slightly without damaging them, because they won't draw a proportionally higher current and the cooling effect of the fan going faster will help prevent it from overheating. I've once tested one of those 3.3V CPU fans to destruction and it took well over 12V before it somked, I wouldn't worry, I think they'll be fine if you connect them in series, even if the loads are unbalanced, I even suspect that they're designed for operation up to 14V, most 12V apliances are.
You can generally safely over-voltage most fans slightly without damaging them, because they won't draw a proportionally higher current and the cooling effect of the fan going faster will help prevent it from overheating. I've once tested one of those 3.3V CPU fans to destruction and it took well over 12V before it somked, I wouldn't worry, I think they'll be fine if you connect them in series, even if the loads are unbalanced, I even suspect that they're designed for operation up to 14V, most 12V apliances are.