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BYU Project to Silence Computer Fans

phunster writes "The New York Times has an article about Scott D. Sommerfeldt and his students at BYU who have created a noise suppression system for computer fans (drop of human blood required to read article). The technology is not new, he uses out of phase sound to substantially cancel out the sound of the fan. What is interesting is his implementation of the technique. While other systems place a microphone and speakers in the center of a room, he places four miniature speakers and microphones around the noise source itself. His results are promising."

3 of 369 comments (clear)

  1. No-reg link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
  2. Re:Silent fans are a BAD thing by stratjakt · · Score: 4, Informative

    Any recent system can monitor the CPU and case fans RPMs (and temperatures) and shutdown/freak/panic/whatever if the fan stops spinning. There are a plethora of third party warning devices to this end as well.

    If my CPU fan stops spinning my computer throws a tantrum you can hear from space.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  3. Maybe its not the fan. Keep the Horse in front!! by lcsjk · · Score: 4, Informative
    Let's not get the cart in front of the horse here, and for those non-USA people, that means "Let's get things in the proper order".

    Maybe we should look at the fan design first. When Brushless-DC fans were first introduced in the early 1980's I evaluated most of the major brands. Blade shape and contour were major contributors to noise, but by far the worst was mounting the fan up against the panel wall with holes or a grill. Running slow also reduces noise. One company's blade design removed the high pitch wind noise and just left a low pitch rumble that sounded quieter than it was. Centrifugal "squirrel-cage" fans were much quieter than axial fans. Sleeve bearings were a little quieter than ball bearings, but had a much shorter life and will "freeze-up" once the oil dissipates. (I actually had this happen to my old computer.)Ball bearings get louder over time, but you'll replace your computer before then.

    Power supplies can reduce airflow requirements considerably by better heatsinks and/or using the chassis for moving the heat away from the hot components. Once the real design issues are tackled, the bell-and-whistles approach could then be used to further reduce sound levels as necessary.

    Dell mounts one fan deep inside the computer and the PS fan is quiet but near a wall. Six weeks ago I bought a Systemax and a Dell computer. Systemax sounded normally obnoxiously loud. Dell was so quiet, I thought it was not working, so I opened it to see if I could tell what was wrong. I was fooled by the sudden start of noise and then quiet.