OK Sam,
Firstly, you say your fans are 12v DC. So you MUST use a DC power source.
You refer to "ordinary 240 - 12V power supplies".<br />I take it you mean the type you get from Tandy, or Argos or wherever and usually plug straight into the wall and sometimes have a voltage selector (1.5, 3, 6, 9, 12v) and various plug options on the cable?
If so, then you will have no real problems. Remember to get the polarity right. If you don't then your fans will go the wrong way round. It is easy to do this, then turn the actual fan round and assume all is OK. But it is not. Most modern fan blades are designed to be much more efficient running in the correct direction. As a general rule, the middle most part of a transformer output plug will be the positive and the cable with a stripe, or the red cable on the fan will be the positive. Equally, black is almost always negative.
It is extremely unlikely you have a transformer that produces AC. Just look at the transformer and it will have the output rating in it somewhere, note the mili-amp rating, and if you see a ~ (tilde, or squiggle) mark, then it is AC (very unlikely). (Note, there WILL be a ~ mark refering to the input - 240V rating - this is OK!)
Some thing to bear in mind:
Wire the 2 fans in parallel, not series. i.e. connect the power leads of both fans directly to the power source. Don't daisy-chain the fans, otherwise they will run at half speed.
The higher the mili-amp rating of the transformer, the closer to their optimal speeds then fans will run. When you use a 240-12V transformer you cannot "give" the fans too much mili-ampage, the fans will "draw" what they need. If the power supply is not up to the job then the fans will run slower and the power supply will get hot or warm as it is being worked to the max.
You might want to consider thermostatic PC fans. You can get them from PC accessory suppliers (look in the small ads in the back of PC shopper).
They come with a thermost that you can put in the hush box, and the fans will slow down (and get quieter) as the box cools.
Are they PC fans by any chance? in which case, why not use a PC power supply (located remotely).
Hope that helps
[ 18-09-2001: Message edited by: Dodgey ]</p>
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