Reduce fan speed

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Gary

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sounds like my pc is ready for take off.... The fan gives 3 sounds: Loud,

louder, loudest and alternate on their own. Is there any way to reduce the

fan speed or is there some program that is constantly running?
 
"Gary" wrote in message news:8E672C07-A476-4D1E-88FF-8EF43525E10B@microsoft.com...

> sounds like my pc is ready for take off.... The fan gives 3 sounds: Loud,

> louder, loudest and alternate on their own. Is there any way to reduce the

> fan speed or is there some program that is constantly running?




I suggest you replace the fan, or at least clean and lubricate it.



http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=computer+fan



Ben
 
"Gary" wrote in message

news:8E672C07-A476-4D1E-88FF-8EF43525E10B@microsoft.com...

> sounds like my pc is ready for take off.... The fan gives 3 sounds: Loud,

> louder, loudest and alternate on their own. Is there any way to reduce the

> fan speed or is there some program that is constantly running?




It may be running so hard because the PC is overheating. Has it always been

this loud, or is a fairly recent development? How old is the system? Have

you ever cleaned out the interior, heatsinks, and intakes? Try a program

such as HWMonitor http://www.cpuid.com/hwmonitor.php to check your temps.

If the system is pretty clean, then it may be something running hard in the

background. Use Task Manager to see if that's the problem.

--

SC Tom
 
On Mar 17, 1:33 am, Gary wrote:

> sounds like my pc is ready for take off.... The fan gives 3 sounds: Loud,

> louder, loudest and alternate on their own. Is there any way to reduce the

> fan speed or is there some program that is constantly running?




You probably don't want to reduce the fan speed - you want to know why

it is changing, if it is normal and if it is not normal, fix it.



We don't know anything about your computer, so do this and we will:



Please provide additional information about your system:



Click Start, Run and in the box enter:



msinfo32



Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select

All, Copy and then paste the information back here.



There will be some personal information (like System Name and User

Name), and whatever appears to be private information to you, just

delete it from the pasted information.



This will minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork.



If you have a desktop, here are some general cleaning instructions:



http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tutorials/tutorial118.html



You do not want the inside to look like these pictures:



http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/11/13/ventblockers/print.html



You need to open the case and determine if the fan is in the power

supply, CPU or video card fan (if so equipped) and then you can decide

what to do. Which is the noisy fan? Without that information, you

will be guessing. Fan bearings are sealed and to not require

lubrication - if the fan is defective, you need to replace it - not

lubricate it. Fans can wear out. If it is dirty, you need to clean

it.



It is interesting to know the temps, but when you see the temp, will

you know if the temp is too high for your configuration or is it

within an optimum range? What will you do when you know the temps?

What is too hot for you? My desktop CPU temperature is 31C. My

laptop is 34C. How do I know if that is too hot and what do I do

about it?



Fan speeds can sometimes change when they need to and this can be

annoying when they do their job so you can adjust them to always run

at some maximum speed so the speed never changes. It could be

changing because it is supposed to change based on what your system is

doing at the time.



Are you playing games? Games are sometimes CPU and video intensive

and can cause temps to go up a lot. Do you have the issue when you

are not playing games? If you are a gamer, your system may not be

designed for the intensity and you may need to make some adjustments.



If you have a laptop, the cleaning instructions are available, but

depend on your make and model (which we'll know when you do the first

part).
 
Gary wrote:

> sounds like my pc is ready for take off.... The fan gives 3 sounds: Loud,

> louder, loudest and alternate on their own. Is there any way to reduce the

> fan speed or is there some program that is constantly running?




Run a copy of Speedfan. Don't adjust anything. Just read out the

temperatures inside the computer. They will give you some idea

why the computer fan is running so aggressively.



http://www.almico.com/sfdownload.php



http://www.almico.com/speedfan440.exe



The program, when it is running, looks like this.

Using the main "readings" windows is good enough. Note

that the labels used ("CPU", "System", "HDD") may not be

correct. It may say "Temp 1", "Temp 2", "Temp 3". You can

post whatever temperatures it shows, and get some feedback.



http://www.almico.com/images/mainwindow.gif



In that example, a CPU temperature of 49C might be fine,

if the CPU was flat out. Generally, you want to stay below

65C, so that you get the full performance from your computer.

It may slow itself down otherwise. (Some CPUs in the

Intel Prescott Pentium 4 generation, may be difficult to

cool well. There is no reason to panic if you note a relatively

high temperature. If the CPU type is one of the lower power

variety, then you'd be more curious if it was running 65C.)



The hard drive temperature is measured by a thermistor inside

the drive. Newer drives are probably equipped with a real readout.

There are cases of hard drives, which report a temperature, but it

never changes. In that Speedfan example screenshot, a temperature

of 30C is pretty good for the hard drive. If it was hitting 50C,

you might be concerned. Fresh intake air on my computer blows right

over the drives. My computer is reporting right now, that both my

hard drives are at 26C.



Another program that can report hard drive temperature, is HDTune.

Version 255 is the free version, suitable for quick checks. The

drive temperature is shown on the screen when the program is running.

(This works as long as the path to the hard drive, supports

SMART diagnostics. Some RAID controllers prevent that kind of access.)



http://www.hdtune.com/files/hdtune_255.exe



The purpose of doing this kind of checking, is to get some

idea how dirty the inside of the computer might be getting.



In some cases, when tiny fans are used on things like video cards,

the lubrication on the fan may evaporate, and the fan can stall.

The GPU may get so hot, as to melt some of the plastic in the area.

To check the video card GPU temperature, if Speedfan can't see it,

you can use GPUZ.



http://www.techpowerup.com/gpuz/



The hottest report I've seen so far for the GPU on a video card,

is 200C, and somehow the card survived. My current video card

runs the fan at low speed and reports 48C or so.



By taking note of the room temperature, and internal component

temperatures inside the computer case, when the computer is

clean and new, you have a "baseline" for comparison. If you

check later and find elevated temperatures, open up the case

and find out why. It could be dust and dirt plugging a filter.

Or, like in the video card case, the fan may have melted and

there might not be any cooling at all.



Some Dell/HP computers may use a large central fan, to move

cooling air through the box, as well as cool the CPU. The fans

may have quite large CFM ratings, like 130CFM. If the computer

ever turns up that fan, you'll know about it right away :-)

It could be your CPU is overheating, or the air inside the

computer case is a lot hotter than normal. I expect the reason

they use fans like that, is to scare the hell out of you when

the computer is getting a bit warm :-) It makes it easier

to convince people to maintain their computer, if it makes

scary noises :-)



You have to be a little careful when cleaning the computer.

I managed to damage a fan the other day, while wiping dust off

the fan blades. You can damage the bearings on a cheap fan,

with only a little bit of mechanical force. The result may be

excessive vibration, the next time you use the computer. I had

to buy a 120mm replacement, to eliminate the noise. Fans come

in about four capacity ranges (low, medium, high, ultra), so

if you ever need to replace a fan, you need to match the type

to get the same performance. It isn't as simple a matter

of just buying something with the same mechanical dimensions

(like 120mm x 120mm x 25mm). In the case of the "hoover" style

fans used on things like the BTX form factor computers, you

can find more or less exact replacements listed on the web for

them. You wouldn't expect to find the right fan at Radio

Shack in that case.



Good luck,

Paul
 
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