View Full Version : New SMCFan Control--1800 RPM min fan speed?
puma1552
Apr 10, 2009, 01:33 AM
What's up with this in the newest version of SMC that just came out today? The min now goes below the original 2500 RPM that the Apple engineer's decided on??
TheRiseofTheFal
Apr 10, 2009, 01:49 AM
i just updated and that option isn't present on mine... hmmmm
maclover001
Apr 10, 2009, 01:56 AM
Min is 2000 for me. (15'' unibody)
dudeitsjay
Apr 10, 2009, 08:29 PM
just updated. mine on the mba b is 2500 min
tsubikiddo
Apr 10, 2009, 08:45 PM
just updated,
My MBA can't spin slower than 2.5k rpm either:confused:
mrossi
Apr 11, 2009, 05:17 AM
The min now goes below the original 2500 RPM that the Apple engineer's decided on??
Yep, i have this too - 1800rpm is the new min. Seems to work fine.
(rev.b 1.8 w/ssd)
fr4c
Apr 11, 2009, 05:11 PM
Mine was also set to the new default of 1800rpm, but I manually changed it back to 2500rpm.
tubbymac
Apr 11, 2009, 06:54 PM
Any difference in noise between the 2500 rpm and the 1800 rpm? I can't even hear my fan at 2500 rpm anyway so I'm thinking 1800 is unnecessary.
tsubikiddo
Apr 12, 2009, 12:10 AM
solved the problem.
I AppZapped smcFanControl and got rid of the .plist file as well
then I put my Recover Disc in and run a Permission repaid just to be safe
Once, done, re-install the latest ver.
BOOM~!
I can put my MBA to spin @1.8k rpm now
I am not sure if that necessarily translates to more battery hrs,
but I need every single drop of the battery due to my daily routine and it sounds right even if it doesn't necessarily give me more batt life.
just my share of exp:)
mrossi
Apr 12, 2009, 07:42 PM
Any difference in noise between the 2500 rpm and the 1800 rpm? I can't even hear my fan at 2500 rpm anyway so I'm thinking 1800 is unnecessary.
I noticed a difference, albeit a very small one, but was in library at the time...so in "normal" environments i guess its probably not noticeable.
I am not sure if that necessarily translates to more battery hrs...
Probably more like battery seconds? I guess lower rpm=lower voltage? So maybe some power being saved there, but I noticed my temps start to jump up faster now when doing anything of consequence, probably due to the fan speed being set lower initially, so the fan revs up earlier than if the min was 2500rpm...any power saving is probably offset by this. Maybe its even worse...though i guess idle/standby times would benefit if it stays at 1800 for any extended period of time?
Lots of assumptions there :S
tsubikiddo
Apr 12, 2009, 08:30 PM
I noticed a difference, albeit a very small one, but was in library at the time...so in "normal" environments i guess its probably not noticeable.
Probably more like battery seconds? I guess lower rpm=lower voltage? So maybe some power being saved there, but I noticed my temps start to jump up faster now when doing anything of consequence, probably due to the fan speed being set lower initially, so the fan revs up earlier than if the min was 2500rpm...any power saving is probably offset by this. Maybe its even worse...though i guess idle/standby times would benefit if it stays at 1800 for any extended period of time?
Lots of assumptions there :S
Since I re-applied AS5, my MBA constantly stays @~39C (2500rpm)
I have yet to test drive the battery performance with 1800rpm min.
but yes, temp does increase, it's 42C(±1) while I am typing this
it's cold from the land down under,
wouldn't mind to cook my Air a little bit:rolleyes:
kaku945
Apr 13, 2009, 05:48 AM
I highly doubt if it is the best thing to do. It runs at 1800rpm for a min or two then probably easily jump to 4000rpm then never drops back to 2500...
tsubikiddo
Apr 13, 2009, 09:15 AM
I highly doubt if it is the best thing to do. It runs at 1800rpm for a min or two then probably easily jump to 4000rpm then never drops back to 2500...
I use Word, pdf Fx3 and WiFi in sch, these won't heat up my MBA much
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