If anyone has any ideas please let me know, I'd like to be able to use aura and not just the standard case settings and then have to play with aura to match everything g. The only time I can get it to somewhat work is if I just hook up the D/signal wire without the ground wire on either the mobo or case controller, but it's like a grainy signal ex: set aura to purple breathing and only hook up the D wire then it does a half ass purple with some rgb mixed in (like it's shorting out the signal) if I have both D and Ground hooked up then I lose ALL aura sync compatibility it seems.Īnd the way I have it hooked up is cooles is hooked up into cpufan controller and then the extra D/G wire into the argb hub, the fans (that do work with aura) are all just hooked straight into the hub. The cpu cooler does work if I use the case's button to control the lighting but if connected to the mobo and/or case controller (I've tried both), it just goes into factory rgb rainbow effect. So my issue is after hooking everything up I can get aura sync to work on everything (motherboard, fans, gpu, ram) BUT not the cpu cooler. My motherboard is - ASUS TUF B460M-plus wifi ![]() The ROG Aura Terminal is available to buy now at S$159.I just finished building my pc today and I'm not sure if my cooler is hooked up wrong or it's just a software bug/issue Alternatively, you can mount it using the included 3M double-sided tape. It is also equipped with rubber feet and four mounting holes that are compatible with standard 2.5-inch SSD mounting brackets. In addition, the included cables let you connect the Aura Terminal to your PC using either the internal or external USB 2.0 ports. The unit can either be powered by a Molex connector or an external power adapter, so you can install it in your PC or leave it outside. It then replicates it by controlling the corresponding LEDs on the attached RGB lighting strips. It works by using your GPU to analyze what’s on your screen and determine the average color value for different areas of the screen. These can also be synchronized with the other Aura Sync LEDs in your PC. ROG Halo enables ambient RGB synchronization that responds to the content on your screen when LED strips are mounted behind a monitor. According to ASUS, this is sufficient lighting to illuminate the inside of most PC cases and create a halo around a monitor using the ROG Halo feature. The Aura Terminal ships with three addressable RGB LED strips – two 30cm and one 60cm strip – so you don’t have to buy your own kit. ![]() ![]() It features four independently controllable and addressable RGB headers, so you can use it to control RGB strips on the inside of your PC and on your monitor.Įach channel supports up to 90 LEDs, but you’re limited to 210 LEDs in total, which translates to a maximum of 4.2m of addressable LED strips. The compatible devices list will be kept updated with software update. ![]() That’s where the ROG Aura Terminal comes in. Aura Creator is an advanced lighting effect editor for users to create their lighting profile and apply to Aura Sync. However, what if you want to extend the RGB lighting beyond your desktop using lighting strips? ASUS’ ROG Aura Terminal is a centralized hub for all your Aura Sync RGB LEDsĪSUS already has a pretty comprehensive ecosystem of Aura Sync products, a selection that includes everything from PC components to monitors and peripherals.
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