Is there such a thing as a silent PC?
#1
Is there such a thing as a silent PC?
My currnet pc is a few yrs old and was bought from a local computer shop. I asked the owner if he could make me a 'silent PC' to which of course said yes
Heat is the enemy he siad, and we can always put more and better fans in to deal with it... blah blah
Well, you can see how this went - I ended up with a noisy pc - which sounds as loud as my old one which didn't have quietness as a criteria
I've seen Macs which have no fans and can only be barley heard sometimes when the processor (?) is crunching, but is it possible to have a pc as silent as a Mac?
This has turned out a long winded question, apologies
Heat is the enemy he siad, and we can always put more and better fans in to deal with it... blah blah
Well, you can see how this went - I ended up with a noisy pc - which sounds as loud as my old one which didn't have quietness as a criteria
I've seen Macs which have no fans and can only be barley heard sometimes when the processor (?) is crunching, but is it possible to have a pc as silent as a Mac?
This has turned out a long winded question, apologies
#4
Scooby Regular
https://www.scan.co.uk/products/nofa...l-and-amd-cpus
https://www.scan.co.uk/products/500w...lus12v-atx-psu
and then need to make sure the case has alot of mesh in it to allow the heat out. tbh its not an ideal solution
https://www.scan.co.uk/products/500w...lus12v-atx-psu
and then need to make sure the case has alot of mesh in it to allow the heat out. tbh its not an ideal solution
#6
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: 32 cylinders and many cats
Posts: 18,658
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like
on
1 Post
Check if you have case fans as well. Is your hard drive an SSD? I have not built my PC to be particularly quiet, but it has a second hard drive that I can obviously hear spinning up.
#7
Scooby Regular
With my MSI M/B I have the ability (via software) to run the various fans in "smart mode" which varies their speed depending upon temps and load.
Trending Topics
#9
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (2)
I work from home, and I have a lot of stuff that runs night and day, some for work and some for my own use. I have replaced the fans in most kit even when brand new with ebm-papst fans, as I sit in my office for 10 - 12 hours most days beside this stuff, it needs to be quiet.
Bear in mind that large fans move more air at lower RPM which keeps noise down, so fit a larger fan and throttle its rpm.
Bear in mind that large fans move more air at lower RPM which keeps noise down, so fit a larger fan and throttle its rpm.
#11
Scooby Regular
Depending upon the brand of motherboard fitted it may have available software to control the speed/load of the cooling fans fitted and thus reduce noise.
MSI supply software called "Command center" which among other things can setup the fans to do more than just run at full speed.
MSI supply software called "Command center" which among other things can setup the fans to do more than just run at full speed.
#14
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (11)
If space/size/high-end looks aren't a huge concern, it will be far more cost-effective to build a sound-proof cabinet for your existing PC than replace individual components or the entire PC with quieter equivalents. The materials will cost you almost nothing (one large sheet of 1/2" MDF, a roll of automotive sound-proofing felt, one or two 140mm 12v DC fans and suitable DC power-supply, screws, brackets, glue, castors, etc) and if you're half-way competent with basic carpentry tools and very basic electricals, you should have it built in an afternoon. The basic gist of the design is a PC-shaped felt-lined MDF box which will just fit your PC with a few cm to spare in each dimension, cut-outs and/or hinged flaps at the ends for cables, inserting CDs and what have you, and large diameter but low-rpm fan(s) at the end(s) for air-flow, if you decide to keep one or both ends fully/partially closed. Castors on the base for ease of movement, and a couple of coats of paint for finish once you've tested the whole thing out and you're sure it's not slowly cooking your PC to death
#15
Also known as daz
My pc is near silent, you can hear it very quietly whirring away but it's hardly bothersome, and I can quite happily sleep with it on.
It's more a question of money, silent components invariably cost more.
My rig is, well I wouldn't say a beast but it's pretty powerful and quiet, I didn't want to compromise on performance because of photoshop/lightroom and gaming.
So both my cpu and gpu are liquid cooled, come pre assembled with fan and radiator.
i7 5820k haswell e 4.5ghz
Corsair h110i gtx for the processor
Inno3d 980ti hybrid black.
512gb 950 pro m2 ssd
As for the other, some silent fan usually thermaltake as I like their fans with fluid bearings.
Only time I notice anything is a tiny bit of coil whine from the graphics card when gaming.
It's more a question of money, silent components invariably cost more.
My rig is, well I wouldn't say a beast but it's pretty powerful and quiet, I didn't want to compromise on performance because of photoshop/lightroom and gaming.
So both my cpu and gpu are liquid cooled, come pre assembled with fan and radiator.
i7 5820k haswell e 4.5ghz
Corsair h110i gtx for the processor
Inno3d 980ti hybrid black.
512gb 950 pro m2 ssd
As for the other, some silent fan usually thermaltake as I like their fans with fluid bearings.
Only time I notice anything is a tiny bit of coil whine from the graphics card when gaming.
Last edited by hux309; 04 November 2017 at 12:50 PM.
#16
Moderator
iTrader: (1)
Yes you can, but it takes a lot of experimenting to build one.
Off the shelfs ones exist, but are pricey and can be based on laptop/low power CPUs, which doesn't compare to proper desktop CPUs. IIRC a mobile or low power i7 CPU is about half as fast as a i7 desktop CPU, but are more geared to fanless or semi-fanless operation.
If modding a existing PC, it's worth disabling it from booting, unplugging components (turn off first) one at a time to assess what's making the noise and which is worst, so you can put more focus on the curlprits, and make sure a noisy fan isn't masking a noisy hard drive motor or screeching Ethernet/LAN controller (which being based on the motherboard may mean a new motherboard).
I've spent a lot of time and money getting a real quiet PC; that was 8 years ago, and I'm still using it in the same configuration bar a SSD and new GPU that can support 4K. It is near silent.
Fans are the major noise, but after you sort that you are left with the whine of hard drive motors (as well as access noise), rubber isolation mounts make the world of difference...even SSDs can make screeching noises when accessing.
PSUs can be a pain of both fan noise and high pitch screeching. BeQuiet PSUs are the best IMO. They are powerful, efficient (low power factor) and quiet. Mine makes no noise despite sucking most of its air straight off my CPU cooler!
CPU cooling is quite easy to manage - Scyth Ninja coolers heatsink a are good for the money, but will need to swap fans for a quieter brand if using with a high power CPU.
GPUs are always a pain in the ****: Very few quiet ones exist unless fanless. And difficult to mod if they are noisy; I prefer GPUs that exhaust heat out of the case, as otherwise they can increase system and PSU temps causing other system fans to run faster.
I control all of my system fans with a TBalancer fan controller, which monitors temperatures via temperature probes and can independently control various fans based on temperature response it keeps all the fans at silent speed levels but can respond if something overheats.....it works very well, unfortunately it is obsolete (no software support beyond Vista), but maybe there is a modern automatic equivalent.
Worth Looking at these forums for independent opinion, as the Chinese idea of "silent" is often on par with a hairdryer
http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums...6623430dc2ff1c
Good PSUs, not tried their other stuff but they often rate highly: https://www.bequiet.com
Off the shelfs ones exist, but are pricey and can be based on laptop/low power CPUs, which doesn't compare to proper desktop CPUs. IIRC a mobile or low power i7 CPU is about half as fast as a i7 desktop CPU, but are more geared to fanless or semi-fanless operation.
If modding a existing PC, it's worth disabling it from booting, unplugging components (turn off first) one at a time to assess what's making the noise and which is worst, so you can put more focus on the curlprits, and make sure a noisy fan isn't masking a noisy hard drive motor or screeching Ethernet/LAN controller (which being based on the motherboard may mean a new motherboard).
I've spent a lot of time and money getting a real quiet PC; that was 8 years ago, and I'm still using it in the same configuration bar a SSD and new GPU that can support 4K. It is near silent.
Fans are the major noise, but after you sort that you are left with the whine of hard drive motors (as well as access noise), rubber isolation mounts make the world of difference...even SSDs can make screeching noises when accessing.
PSUs can be a pain of both fan noise and high pitch screeching. BeQuiet PSUs are the best IMO. They are powerful, efficient (low power factor) and quiet. Mine makes no noise despite sucking most of its air straight off my CPU cooler!
CPU cooling is quite easy to manage - Scyth Ninja coolers heatsink a are good for the money, but will need to swap fans for a quieter brand if using with a high power CPU.
GPUs are always a pain in the ****: Very few quiet ones exist unless fanless. And difficult to mod if they are noisy; I prefer GPUs that exhaust heat out of the case, as otherwise they can increase system and PSU temps causing other system fans to run faster.
I control all of my system fans with a TBalancer fan controller, which monitors temperatures via temperature probes and can independently control various fans based on temperature response it keeps all the fans at silent speed levels but can respond if something overheats.....it works very well, unfortunately it is obsolete (no software support beyond Vista), but maybe there is a modern automatic equivalent.
Worth Looking at these forums for independent opinion, as the Chinese idea of "silent" is often on par with a hairdryer
http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums...6623430dc2ff1c
Good PSUs, not tried their other stuff but they often rate highly: https://www.bequiet.com
Last edited by ALi-B; 04 November 2017 at 05:05 PM.
#17
Moderator
iTrader: (1)
Ironically I think my silent PC just this minute died. Raid 0 array showing as failed on the BIOS and it's not booting off the SSD, Cripes!
Looks like I maybe building a new one sooner than I thought as I'm loathed to spend money on a 9 year old quad core, even if was faster than my i7 ultra book (just).
Looks like I maybe building a new one sooner than I thought as I'm loathed to spend money on a 9 year old quad core, even if was faster than my i7 ultra book (just).
Last edited by ALi-B; 04 November 2017 at 04:22 PM.
#19
Scooby Regular
I use a Dell XPS 8700 and it's about as silent as I could expect it to be just like Hux has said quietly whirring away in the background. I work from home and just don't hear it. No flash cooling systems or fan replacements. Having an SSD/M2 as your system drive is key and using mechanical HDDs as little as possible.
#26
Moderator
iTrader: (1)
Probably because most GFX cards make a right racket unless modded with alternate cooling or fans overridden to minimum (and even the they can buzz).
Personally I wouldn't want to spend over £1k on last years tech...I'd be looking at 8th gen (coffee lake) stuff IMO.
FWIW I'm pricing up a Coffee-Lake i7-8700K in a ITX case ands it's working out around £1200 including 32GB and a 1TB SSD. No idea about how quiet it'll be, but I'm looking at water cooling or external heat pipes to the case which is complicating things.
Dell XPS i7 8th gen is working out about £150 more with similar spec. Tempting.
Personally I wouldn't want to spend over £1k on last years tech...I'd be looking at 8th gen (coffee lake) stuff IMO.
FWIW I'm pricing up a Coffee-Lake i7-8700K in a ITX case ands it's working out around £1200 including 32GB and a 1TB SSD. No idea about how quiet it'll be, but I'm looking at water cooling or external heat pipes to the case which is complicating things.
Dell XPS i7 8th gen is working out about £150 more with similar spec. Tempting.
Last edited by ALi-B; 03 January 2018 at 08:15 AM.
#28
Scooby Regular
#29
Administrator
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Blackpool, Uk. Destination: Rev Limiter.
Posts: 4,464
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I have a totally silent PC. I hate noise, I need a silent office.
It also happens to be right up there with the best of them performance wise... but if you want silence AND performance, then water is the only answer.
Depends how far you want to go financial and space wise.
It also happens to be right up there with the best of them performance wise... but if you want silence AND performance, then water is the only answer.
Depends how far you want to go financial and space wise.
#30
Scooby Regular
Probably because most GFX cards make a right racket unless modded with alternate cooling or fans overridden to minimum (and even the they can buzz).
Personally I wouldn't want to spend over £1k on last years tech...I'd be looking at 8th gen (coffee lake) stuff IMO.
FWIW I'm pricing up a Coffee-Lake i7-8700K in a ITX case ands it's working out around £1200 including 32GB and a 1TB SSD. No idea about how quiet it'll be, but I'm looking at water cooling or external heat pipes to the case which is complicating things.
Dell XPS i7 8th gen is working out about £150 more with similar spec. Tempting.
Personally I wouldn't want to spend over £1k on last years tech...I'd be looking at 8th gen (coffee lake) stuff IMO.
FWIW I'm pricing up a Coffee-Lake i7-8700K in a ITX case ands it's working out around £1200 including 32GB and a 1TB SSD. No idea about how quiet it'll be, but I'm looking at water cooling or external heat pipes to the case which is complicating things.
Dell XPS i7 8th gen is working out about £150 more with similar spec. Tempting.