Register FAQ / Rules Forum Spy Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Go Back   MacRumors Forums > Apple Hardware > Desktops > Mac mini

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old Nov 29, 2006, 11:44 AM   #1
Poff
macrumors 65816
 
Poff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Stavanger, Norway
Possibility of soundless Mac Mini?

I've been thinking about this for a long time. I hate my G4 iMac. It looks great and all, but it's in our living room, and the fans make too much noise. A long time I thought about getting a used cube, since it's fanless. But that won't hold up powerwise anymore. So now I'm eyeing the mini.

What I'm thinking is I would exchange its harddrive for a flash-drive. It wouldn't be big... 8 gigs maybe. And then I could have an external hdd I could turn on if I wanted to watch a movie or something. (Alternatively, I could stream the content from my old iMac in another room, using bonjour.)

Then there's still the fan. I know a lot of you will say it doesn't make much noise. At least I know the Macbook makes too much noise. If you can hear difference with it being on or off, it's too much imo. I'm a musician, so my ears are very often processing all the different sounds around me, and the fan noise is often annoying.

One option I've been thinking of, is downclocking the processor so it'll develop less heat. Because the fans are heat-regulated, right? I'm wondering if this is at all possible, and how much I'd have to downclock the Mini. Would putting a core solo in there help? Or should I wait for the next gen portable processor? I don't remember the name now, but seem to remember it develops less heat.

Even if I don't get it totally silent, at least it'll be much better than the noise my current iMac puts out. (fans aren't heat-regulated either - always at full speed.)

Your thoughts on this are warmly welcomed.
__________________
A computer you had to learn how to use was a bad idea from its birth.
Poff is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 11:50 AM   #2
combatcolin
macrumors 68020
 
combatcolin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Northants, UK
Easiest solution?, sell the bugger and buy an Intel iMac with lots of RAM.

Topping out the RAM will at least decrease the VM accesing from the HD.

Or, buy a Mac Mini with a BT KB and Mouse, store the Mini a good few feet a way and just have the KB and mouse in front of you.

Would need a long DVI cable though.
__________________
Wanting a new ipod
combatcolin is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 11:56 AM   #3
Eidorian
macrumors Penryn
 
Eidorian's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Indiana
Send a message via AIM to Eidorian
Unless you're going to hit the CPU's at 100%, I've never seen my Mac mini's fan go over 1,500 RPM's. It's silent at that speed. I've never heard hard drive noise either.

I agree with getting more RAM. You'll get less hard drive access for paging.
__________________
Core i5 750 / 16 GB RAM / SSD / HD 7950 / Windows 8
MRoogle it!
Eidorian is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 11:56 AM   #4
Poff
Thread Starter
macrumors 65816
 
Poff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Stavanger, Norway
Thumbs up

Putting a flash-drive in it won't be a problem. I'll just have to find a standard 2,5" SATA flash drive, I think I've seen them before. At least IDE ones, so there's got to be some SATA-drives too.

So really, the fans are the main problem. That rules the intel iMac out. I've only heard the G5 iMac, but that made even more noise than my G4 iMac as soon as you did something heavy on it.

The main issue will be somehow getting rid of the fan-noise on the mac-mini..
__________________
A computer you had to learn how to use was a bad idea from its birth.
Poff is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:05 PM   #5
Poff
Thread Starter
macrumors 65816
 
Poff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Stavanger, Norway
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eidorian View Post
Unless you're going to hit the CPU's at 100%, I've never seen my Mac mini's fan go over 1,500 RPM's. It's silent at that speed. I've never heard hard drive noise either.

I agree with getting more RAM. You'll get less hard drive access for paging.
Hmm.. how is it compared to a macbook, if anyone has compared the two.
__________________
A computer you had to learn how to use was a bad idea from its birth.
Poff is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:05 PM   #6
NoNameBrand
macrumors 6502
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Halifax, Canada
Send a message via AIM to NoNameBrand
You have very sensitive ears. The lamp and pizza-box iMacs I've used have been damn near silent.

The Mac mini is silent unless you've turned up the fan speed with smcFanControl (which I did, as a cool HD and CPU matter to me more than a little noise).
__________________
lonelyfridge.com | flickr
NoNameBrand is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:07 PM   #7
Eidorian
macrumors Penryn
 
Eidorian's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Indiana
Send a message via AIM to Eidorian
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poff View Post
Hmm.. how is it compared to a macbook, if anyone has compared the two.
The MacBook is essentially a laptop version of the Mac mini. You're not going to see much of an improvement in quietness.

Quote:
Originally Posted by NoNameBrand View Post
You have very sensitive ears. The lamp and pizza-box iMacs I've used have been damn near silent.

The Mac mini is silent unless you've turned up the fan speed with smcFanControl (which I did, as a cool HD and CPU matter to me more than a little noise).
The vent in my office is louder then my Mac mini at 3,000 RPM's.
__________________
Core i5 750 / 16 GB RAM / SSD / HD 7950 / Windows 8
MRoogle it!
Eidorian is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:09 PM   #8
gekko513
macrumors 601
 
gekko513's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
My G4 Mac mini is the most silent computer I've witnessed. It's more silent than my MacBook Pro, which is rather quiet by itself although I can clearly hear the whoshing sound when it's on. For the Mac mini I had to put my ear up close to hear that it was on. I've heard someone say the Intel Mac mini makes more noise, but I can't confirm that myself.
gekko513 is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:12 PM   #9
Poff
Thread Starter
macrumors 65816
 
Poff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Stavanger, Norway
Quote:
Originally Posted by NoNameBrand View Post
You have very sensitive ears. The lamp and pizza-box iMacs I've used have been damn near silent.
Silent compared to my mums old pentium 200mhz, yes.
Silent compared to a macbook, no.

It's all these sounds around us we normally don't notice, but they still tire us. When you actually start paying attention to them, it gets annoying. The fridge is another example. Our living room and kitchen is combined. Somebody please invent a silent fridge!

I'm not talking about "natural" sounds. Like water, wind and stuff. They have a more calming sound. But fans and stuff sound "unnatural" and tiring. It's a big problem in offices, for example.
__________________
A computer you had to learn how to use was a bad idea from its birth.
Poff is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:16 PM   #10
aloofman
macrumors 68020
 
aloofman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Socal
I have a Mac Mini and can attest to how quiet it is. I can understand wanting it to be even quieter, but replacing the hard drive and underclocking it seem like too much work to me, not to mention the potential for problems.

I recommend finding a creative way to muffle the noise instead. Is it on a desk? Or a shelf? I know someone who put it in his living room and put the mini behind a PS2 and the TV, where the noise is blocked even more. The only inconvenience is when he has to insert/remove a disc, as he has to kind of reach back in there.
aloofman is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 12:30 PM   #11
tadd
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Raleigh, NC
Intel iMac not same as G5 iMac

I have both an Intel iMac and a G5 iMac. The fan difference is profound. Don't let the G5 iMac scare you away from the Intel Mac products.

The biggest problem with the Intel MacBooks is that the fan portals can easily be blocked if the MacBook is sitting on anything but a table. We sit our MacBook on blankets, laps, chairs, carpet. Heck, if we had a nice smooth surface to put it on we'd be using the iMac.

Tadd
__________________
Tadd
tadd is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 03:02 PM   #12
4JNA
macrumors 65816
 
4JNA's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: looking for trash files
mini core solo, and a big external drive in a silent case. my dimmer switch makes more noise. really.

the flash hd replacement would be a big waste of money in this situation. stick with the slow and quiet 5400 rpm sata drive.

if you are the dremel/mod kinda user, the mini can be moved to a 'cube' case, and a fanless heatsink can be used. big low rpm fan for the case, and all is good!

best of luck.
__________________
KATE: RISC architecture is gonna change everything. DADE: Yeah. RISC is good.
Try Folding, all the cool kids are doing it...
4JNA is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 03:38 PM   #13
jimbama
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by combatcolin View Post
Easiest solution?, sell the bugger and buy an Intel iMac with lots of RAM.
...if you're lucky enough to get a quiet intel imac- mine is brand new and the fans are far, far from quiet....
jimbama is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 04:35 PM   #14
Eidorian
macrumors Penryn
 
Eidorian's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Indiana
Send a message via AIM to Eidorian
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimbama View Post
...if you're lucky enough to get a quiet intel imac- mine is brand new and the fans are far, far from quiet....
What's the speed on them? It's usually 1500 RPM's constantly unless you're doing have CPU work.
__________________
Core i5 750 / 16 GB RAM / SSD / HD 7950 / Windows 8
MRoogle it!
Eidorian is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 09:10 PM   #15
jimbama
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eidorian View Post
What's the speed on them? It's usually 1500 RPM's constantly unless you're doing have CPU work.
Good question.

Here's a potentially stupid question- how do I check this? istat doesn't list fan speed/CPU temp on intel macs (i'm working on a imac C2D 20")
jimbama is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 09:12 PM   #16
Eidorian
macrumors Penryn
 
Eidorian's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Indiana
Send a message via AIM to Eidorian
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimbama View Post
Good question.

Here's a potentially stupid question- how do I check this? istat doesn't list fan speed/CPU temp on intel macs (i'm working on a imac C2D 20")
More then likely 1500-5500 RPM's.

Running Folding@Home I doubt I go over 3000 RPM's.
__________________
Core i5 750 / 16 GB RAM / SSD / HD 7950 / Windows 8
MRoogle it!
Eidorian is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 09:36 PM   #17
jimbama
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eidorian View Post
More then likely 1500-5500 RPM's.

Running Folding@Home I doubt I go over 3000 RPM's.
Is there a utility that will tell me exactly what speeed my fans are running at? Can't seem to find anything.
jimbama is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 09:46 PM   #18
Eidorian
macrumors Penryn
 
Eidorian's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Indiana
Send a message via AIM to Eidorian
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimbama View Post
Is there a utility that will tell me exactly what speeed my fans are running at? Can't seem to find anything.
smcFanControl only works on laptops and the Mac mini. Hardware Monitor can detect your fan speeds but you have to pay for it.
__________________
Core i5 750 / 16 GB RAM / SSD / HD 7950 / Windows 8
MRoogle it!
Eidorian is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 29, 2006, 09:49 PM   #19
jimbama
macrumors newbie
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eidorian View Post
smcFanControl only works on laptops and the Mac mini. Hardware Monitor can detect your fan speeds but you have to pay for it.
Gotcha. Thanks for the info....
jimbama is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 30, 2006, 05:58 AM   #20
VoodooDaddy
macrumors 65816
 
Join Date: May 2003
The mini is silent, end of story. I've had mine since June and have heard the fan kick in 2 times.And I only have 512 ram and have a lot of things running all the time so the hdd is constantly swapping. The only other sound it makes is when you spin up a cd or dvd.

If you ears are that sensitive either wear earplugs or move the computer to a different room. I can't imagine anyone thinking the sound of a mini is annoying (there is no sound)

From a foot away you would not be able to tell if a mini was on or off if not for the indicator light on the front.
VoodooDaddy is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Nov 30, 2006, 08:23 PM   #21
applemacdude
Banned
 
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Over The Rainbow
Send a message via ICQ to applemacdude Send a message via AIM to applemacdude Send a message via MSN to applemacdude Send a message via Yahoo to applemacdude Send a message via Skype™ to applemacdude
mini is quieter compared to macbook
applemacdude is offline   0 Reply With Quote
Old Dec 2, 2006, 10:54 PM   #22
MacBoySeattle
Banned
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
My god! Man we're descended from primates in Africa that used to live out in NATURE! You know, sounds of birds, and bees, and occasionally the lion which would come eat your noise sensitive butt! What kind of person is so sensitive that they complain about the virtually silent Mac Mini and the noise of new-age refrigerators which are virtually silent? You were NOT genetically designed to live in complete silence or even want that. It's unnatural!!
MacBoySeattle is offline   0 Reply With Quote

Reply
MacRumors Forums > Apple Hardware > Desktops > Mac mini

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

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Possible to create 2011 Mac Mini Lion (build:11A2061) install media? belltree Mac mini 38 Feb 17, 2012 07:10 AM
What is the max HD size possible in a mid-2010 Mac Mini? alexreich Mac mini 8 Jun 19, 2011 08:42 AM
Possibility Of A Mac Mini Update On Sept 9th Along with the iPods. NyMetsFan08 Mac mini 34 Sep 13, 2008 10:10 PM
possiblity of a mac mini update? m2gc Buying Tips and Advice 1 Oct 3, 2006 12:26 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:30 AM.

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

Mobile Version | Fixed | Fluid | Fluid HD
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

Privacy / DMCA contact / Affiliate and FTC Disclosure
Copyright 2002-2013, MacRumors.com, LLC