Register FAQ/Rules Forum Spy Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Welcome to the Mac Forums forums. Please read the FAQ if you have questions. Register to participate.

 
Go Back   Mac Forums > Apple Hardware > Desktops > Mac Pro, Power Mac
TouchArcade.com - iPhone Game Reviews and News

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old Nov 23, 2009, 10:19 PM   #1
kamek
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Mac Pro 8-core Power Supply Making Noise Like Refrigerator Radiator

This is in reference to a Mac Pro 3,1 8-core purchased around Feb 2008.

Lately, I've noticed a strange noise coming from my power supply that sounds like the noise a refrigerator radiator makes. It's a humming noise that rapidly comes and goes, constantly.

The power supply fan speed was running at 599rpm yesterday, but is running at 629rpm today.

I'm not sure if the problem could've been caused by adding additional ram (12GB, OWC) or an additional HDD (3rd HDD, WD), but I didn't really notice the noise until after adding these components.

What could be the cause of this problem? What are my repair options if necessary (without Apple Care)?

Thanks in advance.
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 12:05 AM   #2
Infrared
macrumors 65816
 
Infrared's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
The power supply fan speed was running at 599rpm yesterday, but is running at 629rpm today.
The power supply fan speed varies in relation to the ambient temperature.
Infrared is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 12:07 AM   #3
akadmon
macrumors 68000
 
akadmon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Massachusetts
It's most likely one of the hard disks resonating. Try swapping bays.
__________________
Mac Pro 1,1 Quad 2.66Ghz w/ ATI 4870 (Apple)+Nvidia 7300GT, 12G RAM, Apple 30" Cinema HD + Dell 2407WFP
akadmon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 09:15 AM   #4
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by akadmon View Post
It's most likely one of the hard disks resonating. Try swapping bays.
I'll give this a try when I get home in the afternoon. Would it be ok to move the HDD from bay 3 to bay 4 and leave bay 3 open?
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 09:30 AM   #5
goodcow
macrumors 6502
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
I'll give this a try when I get home in the afternoon. Would it be ok to move the HDD from bay 3 to bay 4 and leave bay 3 open?
Yes.
goodcow is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 09:56 AM   #6
kellen
macrumors 65816
 
kellen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Philadelphia
I had the same problem and it eventually went away though. Researching it I found the door may be the problem, try reseating it or leaving a combination of the latch open/closed and with the lock mechanism out.

I also was told to try upping that fan rpm to 600, as users reported it making that sound disappear.

What would make mine go away was moving the computer. It would go away for a little bit, but return intermittently.

Like I said mine has disappeared. Seemed to work itself out.
__________________
Octo MP 2.8 12GB, 3.8TB, 4870. MBP 2.4. Dual 23" ACDs. 3GS 32GB iPhone. Nikon D50.
kellen is online now   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 01:13 PM   #7
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kellen View Post
I had the same problem and it eventually went away though. Researching it I found the door may be the problem, try reseating it or leaving a combination of the latch open/closed and with the lock mechanism out.

I also was told to try upping that fan rpm to 600, as users reported it making that sound disappear.

What would make mine go away was moving the computer. It would go away for a little bit, but return intermittently.

Like I said mine has disappeared. Seemed to work itself out.
I tried removing the door, which only led to making the noise more audible. My power supply fan speed has been running between 599 to 629 on its own. I also did move the computer (thinking it was too close to the wall), and the sound did go away for a few minutes, but it came back! Thanks for the suggestions - you're lucky the sound went away on your Mac!

I'll update once I get to move the HDD around.
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 03:34 PM   #8
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Tried swapping HDD bays and the sound is still there.

I'm just about positive that the humming noise that comes and goes every second is coming from the power supply.

Any other suggestions?
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 24, 2009, 03:49 PM   #9
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
Tried swapping HDD bays and the sound is still there.

I'm just about positive that the humming noise that comes and goes every second is coming from the power supply.

Any other suggestions?
Assuming there's no issues with the PSU itself, it could be "dirty power" (noise, brown-outs = low wall voltage, but not a total loss of power,...). A good UPS could help, but you'd need to pick one up in order to test it (presuming you don't have one that you can borrow, and the consumer units aren't the best for testing this, as more noise can get through). You'd want an APC SmartUPS or similar - continuous unit, not a switched unit (power always comes off the battery, not the wall and switched to the battery in low voltage conditions).
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 25, 2009, 03:47 PM   #10
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by nanofrog View Post
Assuming there's no issues with the PSU itself, it could be "dirty power" (noise, brown-outs = low wall voltage, but not a total loss of power,...). A good UPS could help, but you'd need to pick one up in order to test it (presuming you don't have one that you can borrow, and the consumer units aren't the best for testing this, as more noise can get through). You'd want an APC SmartUPS or similar - continuous unit, not a switched unit (power always comes off the battery, not the wall and switched to the battery in low voltage conditions).
But the computer still runs just fine, except the power supply makes a hum now. Can you give some more insight on the "dirty power?"
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Nov 25, 2009, 04:33 PM   #11
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
But the computer still runs just fine, except the power supply makes a hum now. Can you give some more insight on the "dirty power?"
Noise and poor power conditions (voltages all over the place, and likely low). Filtration is needed, and a good UPS can provide it (handles more than filtration, as it can deal with outages and low voltage scenarios = brown-outs). You could even benefit by looking at the other devices on the same circuit. Assuming there's something else on it, try unplugging those devices, and see if it changes the hum in the PSU (it could get lower, and better yet, vanish <inaudible>).

Ultimately, wall voltages aren't constant as they will vary with the load on the circuit you're connected to. For example, if you're at the end of a run (physical location of your house/apt/office), the power isn't as clean and stable as it is nearer the beginning of the circuit (power lines and transformers all the way back to the power plant). Age and condition of the equipment even matters, especially if it's not well maintained..
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 5, 2009, 12:41 AM   #12
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by nanofrog View Post
Noise and poor power conditions (voltages all over the place, and likely low). Filtration is needed, and a good UPS can provide it (handles more than filtration, as it can deal with outages and low voltage scenarios = brown-outs). You could even benefit by looking at the other devices on the same circuit. Assuming there's something else on it, try unplugging those devices, and see if it changes the hum in the PSU (it could get lower, and better yet, vanish <inaudible>).

Ultimately, wall voltages aren't constant as they will vary with the load on the circuit you're connected to. For example, if you're at the end of a run (physical location of your house/apt/office), the power isn't as clean and stable as it is nearer the beginning of the circuit (power lines and transformers all the way back to the power plant). Age and condition of the equipment even matters, especially if it's not well maintained..
Haven't had the chance to try out a UPS yet, but the noise seems to have calmed down a little after removing my third HDD. Could it be that I'm loading the power supply with too much? Here are my specs that were added from the stock configuration:

- 6 x 2 GB OWC ram
- 1 x 750 GB Samsung Spinpoint F1 HDD
- 1 x 1 TB WD Caviar Black HDD
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 5, 2009, 01:20 PM   #13
handheldgames
macrumors regular
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
If its not a new machine, try cleaning it with compressed air. Blow from the inside to the out. Take your machine outside for this one.

If its under warranty, take it in. If the capacitors or fan are humming, could be a sign of impending failure.
__________________
2009 MacPro 3.3 Quad, 12GB RAM, ATI 4870 + 7300 @ Home
2008 MacPro 2.8 Octo, 10GB RAM, HIS Flashed 512MB 4870 @ Work
2009 Macbook Pro 15" 2.66 128SSD
handheldgames is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 5, 2009, 01:25 PM   #14
Spacedust
macrumors regular
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Poland
Replace the rear fan in memory compartment. I got the same sound in Mac Pro 2006. After replacement it's gone
__________________
MP 2006, 2xQuad Core Xeon E5345 2.33 GHz, 32 GB RAM, HIS HD4870 512 MB, Kingston SSD 40GB+3x500GB RAID 0, 2xSD, ACD 23" | MBP CD 2.0 GHz, 2GB, X1600, 320 GB
MP 2008 new logic board (rebuilding soon)
Spacedust is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 5, 2009, 01:44 PM   #15
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
Haven't had the chance to try out a UPS yet, but the noise seems to have calmed down a little after removing my third HDD. Could it be that I'm loading the power supply with too much? Here are my specs that were added from the stock configuration:

- 6 x 2 GB OWC ram
- 1 x 750 GB Samsung Spinpoint F1 HDD
- 1 x 1 TB WD Caviar Black HDD
No, that's not much of a load (adds ~80 - 85W), so there's nothing to worry about in this area.
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 7, 2009, 01:16 AM   #16
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by handheldgames View Post
If its not a new machine, try cleaning it with compressed air. Blow from the inside to the out. Take your machine outside for this one.

If its under warranty, take it in. If the capacitors or fan are humming, could be a sign of impending failure.
I don't believe it's under warranty anymore because I purchased it around Feb 2008. Do you suggest I give Apple a call to see if they're still willing to help me? Should I just purchase the Apple Care plan even though I would only have 1 remaining year on it? I'm not sure how all this works.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Spacedust View Post
Replace the rear fan in memory compartment. I got the same sound in Mac Pro 2006. After replacement it's gone
The hum is pretty loud from the lower fan by the memory now that you mention it. Either that, or this hum has driven my crazy...
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 7, 2009, 12:38 PM   #17
akadmon
macrumors 68000
 
akadmon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Massachusetts
You can't buy Apple Care for a machine that's more than 1 year old.
__________________
Mac Pro 1,1 Quad 2.66Ghz w/ ATI 4870 (Apple)+Nvidia 7300GT, 12G RAM, Apple 30" Cinema HD + Dell 2407WFP
akadmon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 13, 2009, 02:52 AM   #18
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Still looking for suggestions, please!
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 13, 2009, 07:08 PM   #19
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
Still looking for suggestions, please!
What happened with the UPS, moving items off the circuits,...?

Without such information, there's no real way to help you.
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 13, 2009, 09:54 PM   #20
bearcatrp
macrumors 6502a
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Boon Docks USA
Install smcfancontrol. then adjust each fan by itself to isolate which fan is giving you a problem. It won't adjust the PSU fan though. You might want to insure they are tightened down. If it is the fan, its not hard to replace it yourself.
__________________
2008 2.8Ghz Octo MacPro w/24gb ram, Back to Leopard,/
2.16 iMac (24 inch) Tiger, 2Ghz MacBook 2008,
Apple TV, 32GB iPod touch 3rd Gen.
Home built 2.5Ghz octo PC (cheaper than my mac pro)
bearcatrp is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 14, 2009, 12:01 AM   #21
kamek
Thread Starter
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by nanofrog View Post
What happened with the UPS, moving items off the circuits,...?

Without such information, there's no real way to help you.
I've tried taking the load off the circuits with no luck. I don't have a readily available UPS, and I would end up having to buy one.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bearcatrp View Post
Install smcfancontrol. then adjust each fan by itself to isolate which fan is giving you a problem. It won't adjust the PSU fan though. You might want to insure they are tightened down. If it is the fan, its not hard to replace it yourself.
Thanks -- I'll looking into smcfancontrol. I'm not sure if it's a fan because it almost sounds as if the electricity through the PSU is causing the sound.
kamek is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 14, 2009, 10:22 AM   #22
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kamek View Post
I've tried taking the load off the circuits with no luck. I don't have a readily available UPS, and I would end up having to buy one.
You need to try this then, and see what happens (if it's a power quality issue or PSU).
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 15, 2009, 02:27 AM   #23
drtech
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
I think @spacedust may have located the issue. We run many (many) workstations and servers (including Mac Pros) and eventually the bearings in the fans will go bad. It starts with with an ever-so-slight vibration, then a hum, then eventually a "grinding" noise (although it's not actually grinding but rather resonance in the bearings). Replacing the fan works like a charm.

The higher fan RPM may actually be a symptom of the bad bearings. The bad bearings cause more drag in the fan thereby causing the Mac to increase the power to the fan to maintain RPM.

Fans are relatively inexpensive. You may want to consider giving this a shot before tearing apart the entire Mac chasing the sound.

Jeff
__________________
Data Recovery Technician
www.MacintoshDataRecovery.com - Specialized Mac Data Recovery
*Use the information provided in this post at your own risk without any warranties, expressed or implied.
drtech is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 15, 2009, 02:30 AM   #24
nanofrog
macrumors 601
 
Join Date: May 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by drtech View Post
I think @spacedust may have located the issue. We run many (many) workstations and servers (including Mac Pros) and eventually the bearings in the fans will go bad. It starts with with an ever-so-slight vibration, then a hum, then eventually a "grinding" noise (although it's not actually grinding but rather resonance in the bearings). Replacing the fan works like a charm.

The higher fan RPM may actually be a symptom of the bad bearings. The bad bearings cause more drag in the fan thereby causing the Mac to increase the power to the fan to maintain RPM.

Fans are relatively inexpensive. You may want to consider giving this a shot before tearing apart the entire Mac chasing the sound.

Jeff
The OP still hasn't sorted out power as a possibility though, and it's easier than tearing into the PSU to swap out the fan.
nanofrog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Dec 15, 2009, 07:24 AM   #25
sparkie7
macrumors 65816
 
sparkie7's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
put a can of coke inside. might stop the noise

sorry couldn't resist
sparkie7 is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply

Mac Forums > Apple Hardware > Desktops > Mac Pro, Power Mac

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:32 PM.

Mac News | Mac Rumors | iPhone Game Reviews | iPhone Apps

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.10
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright 2002-2010, MacRumors.com, LLC