Batz,
Have a look around for an old mobile phone charger, these usually work great.
cheers Ross
For further pedantry, the third wire will be a pulse to indicate the speed that the fan is rotating, not temperature.
Batz, wire red and black to +ve and -ve 12V DC and you'll be fine. They generally draw decimal points of an amp, so any cheap plug pack will be fine.
EDIT: Most PC fans will run (but slower) on lesser volatages. So 9V will do, 7 at a push and 5V if you don't mind giving the fan a hand at starting.
I've not encountered fans providing tachometric pulse outputs outside of CPU coolers. The ones I've been harvesting thermistors from came out of IBM desktop machines and Compaq Proliants from the mid-late 1990s and were general cooling fans (although some of them were pointing at the CPU heatsink).
Either way, unless you're overcooking a fan solution, you only have to worry about red and black.
Pardon my ignorance, but why would anyone care about the temperature of the fan? Temperature of your components matter, not the temperature of the hub of a fan. I'm pretty sure 99% of the time you'll find the yellow monitoring wire measures rpm of the fan, giving either 3,4 or 6 pulses per revolution, depending on model.
Batz,
Here's a pic of my magnetic stirrer using a PC fan to spin the magnet...
View attachment 11506
Cheers,
TL
I have a power supply from an old modem.
Fans stuffed but :angry:
I'll try a computer shop later in the week,I have to go into Gympie
Batz
Before spending money, can you confirm (for your own purposes) that the power supply is good? I once spent several months cussing the purchase of a cheap 'amplified indoor tv/fm antenna' before realising that the plug pack was the issue. Of course I felt quite stupid for a while after that (well, more than usual).