If you don't want to use any external components, and just the circuitry on the mobo, the answer is _NO_ unless you've hacked something and can monitor motor current.Because this is a fan that is blowing to the PCB and I want to eliminate usage of any other external components, somehow verify that with the electronics on the board level
Depends upon the amplitude of the AC portion of the waveform.Waveform in the Figure is just an example of the current waveform I see.
How do I rectify the signal to get the average current?
If you measure the air temperature of air before it goes into the fan and again after the fan all you'll find is the same temperature. The fan moves ambient air. If it's blowing across something that is hotter than ambient then heat will be stripped away. So just measuring the temperature of the air without anything to compare it to would likely be a waste of time.Alternatively, a simple thermal sensor that is in the airflow could be checked at startup before the fan is spun up and you could look for a drop in temperature due to convective cooling. The problem with that would be if you also want to “watch” the fan and shutdown if it fails. I don’t think it would have a good response time to a failure but that’s just surmise.