


You can pick your language and temperature readout as well. You can set the software to run on windows startup and minimize it all of the time as well. The Setting page has a few tabs up top but for the most part, there isn’t too much going on here. There are a LOT more lighting effects on this page as well and for a lot of them you can get into more detail like setting up the colors that are being used This has all four ports on the controller shown and you can set different fan speed modes and LED modes for each port here not just the entire system. Then the SL Infinity Lighting page is where you can dive into more detailed control. The Quick/Sync lighting page has a case picture and here you can quickly set up an LED mode along with setting its speed and direction. In the bottom half of that page you can pick from a list of fan modes or on the right you can create your own fan profile or set a specific speed across the board. Each port can be set to a different fan profile and you can change what device it is tied to for temperatures as well which is great. The fan speed page now also includes the mention of pump/fan on it and on that page, we have the four ports on the controller listed. The landing page has your system info from CPU, RAM, and GPU usage, clock speeds, fan speeds, and temperatures, and also your storage and network information as well. The main landing page for the L-Connect 3 software which is Lian Li’s software shows us that they have expanded past just controlling their Uni-Fans with it. Before getting into performance for the Lian Li Uni Fan SL-Infinity 120 RGB Fans I hooked everything up including the controller and jumped into the software to get things set up.
