You can do that as you say, but there's a better way. Why? The CPU_FAN, CPU_OPT and AIO_PUMP fan headers all use the temperature sensor inside the CPU chip for their guide on what fan speed to run. The three CHA_FAN headers use, instead, a sensor on the mobo, and that is the best guide for case ventilation. So for optimum fan control, you need a way to connect four fans to those three headers. The simplest device for that is Splitters.
The simplest of these devices has one input "arm" with a female connector with four holes to plug into a mobo header, and two output "arms" each with male (with pins) where you can plug in a fan. Example:
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That's a 2-pack of 2-output Splitters, and you CAN use this 4-pin model for your 3-pin fans. When you plug in a 3-pin fan, it simply does not connect to Pin #4.
Do not get a HUB. That is a different type of device and often the two things are mis-labelled. A HUB has input and output "arms" or may look like a circuit board or closed box. What is distinctive is that a HUB also has an extra "arm" that must plug into a power output from the PSU to get power for its fans. You do not need one of these, and they only work with 4-pin fans.
You need to know three things when choosing a Splitter.
1. A Splitter gets all the power for its fans from the host header, and hence us limited to that header's max output. The limit is 1.0 A total current load for all fans on one header. The fans you are considering all use less than 0.3 A max each, so connecting two fans to one header is perfectly OK.
2. The method of controlling the speed for 3-pin fans is different from how to control 4-pin ones. So you should NOT mix 3- and 4-pn fans on the same header. In your case, use two CHA_FAN headers and one Splitter on each of them, with two fans per header. Pit the two 3-pin fans on one header together, and the two 4-pin fans on another. See your mobo's BIOS Manual here
on p.48 for options to set for EACH of the CHA_FAN headers you use. Set them as:
Chassis Fan Control to DC for the 3-pin fans.r PW< for the 4-pin fans.
Chassis Fan Source to Motherboard to use that temperature sensor.
Chassis fan Profile to Standard for automatic control based on temperature.
After you have the headers configured, use Esc to get to the Monitor Menu, then choose Exit at upper right to get to the Exit Menu (p.28). Choose Saver Changes and Exit to save your settings and reboot.
3. Any mobo header can deal with the speed signal sent back to it from ONE fan only. So the Splitters will ensure the host header only gets one fan's signal. If you look closely at the two outputs of each header, you will see that one has all four pins, and one is missing Pin #3. The speed signal of the fan plugged into the output with the missing Pin #3 is simply never reported - it is ignored. This has NO impact on ability to control speed. It merely means that, when you go looking for fan speed readings, you will see on each of those headers the speed of only one of its two fans.