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Lower the noise of your hard drives


Zeus_Hunt

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Hard Drives can be terribly noise makers in computers. This is especially true when you are one of those users who buys silent pc hardware and uses fan regulators to lower the noise of system fans. When the noise of those fans is lowered other noises can probably be heard that you did not recognize before.

This can be really frustrating. I know this because I experienced this issues. I lowered the fan speed of the cpu and graphic card plus I bought a silent power supply only to find out that my hard drives were making a pitching sound, barely recognizable but in such a sound spectrum that it soon drove me crazy.

There is a solution for everything though and there is a nice one for lowering the noise of your hard drives. You have to know if you are using SATA or IDE hard drives though. If you use IDE hard drives you can use the excellent software Silent Drive.

486793SilentDrive.JPG

The image above is a screenshot of the 21K software. It displays all IDE hard drives, as you can see I have none. What you do is simply. You choose the hard drive from the list at the top. Silent Drive will then check if the hard drive supports a feature called Automatic Acoustic Management.

If the hard drive supports AAM it will display the current setting. This can either be Aus (off), laut (loud), mittel (medium) or leise (almost silent). The medium setting is not support by all hard drives but loud and almost silent should work all the time.

If you want to lower the noise of your hard drive you select the setting “leise” of course. The Seek Test button puts the hard drive to a test and the difference between loud and almost silent should be recognizable by the user.

If you do use SATA drives like I do you have the choice to use a software by Hitachi called Feature Tool which is available as a boot disk only which means that you can use it independently from your operating system. The Feature Tool does work with IDE hard drives as well making this ideal for Linux or Mac users.

Just download the 2 Megabyte ISO image and burn it to a CD. Boot your computer afterwards from that CD. Don’t be confused that this is a software by Hitachi, it does support most hard drives that are not manufactured by Hitachi as well.

8155076hitachi-feature-tool.jpeg

As you can see the Feature Tool has many options that are worth exploring. This article concentrates on the Acoustic Level which can be changed in the Features menu. Before you see that screen you have to choose the drive that you want to manage.

499290lower-noise-hard-drive.jpeg

The next screen displays the Automatic Acoustic Management of that drive. It can be disabled, enabled with recommended values or enabled with user defined values.

The user has the option to move the slider to either reduce the hard drive noise or to increase it. Increasing it would sound like a crazy thing to do. One should note however that lowering the noise has a small - really - performance effect on the hard drive.

I prefer silent hard drives over ones that are loud but perform a tad better. The choice is yours though. It is a good idea to test the setting before saving the changes.

If your hard drive does not support the option that you are trying to change you will receive a notification after trying to save the new settings.

Download : SilentDrive 2.4

Download : Feature Tool 2.07

Download : Feature Tool User Guide - Pdf

viewpo0.gifView : Original Article

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i thought a the type of noise that a harddrive makes tells you what is wrong with it.

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i thought a the type of noise that a harddrive makes tells you what is wrong with it.

There is a also a normal working read/write noise... as if something is getting churned inside...

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i thought a the type of noise that a harddrive makes tells you what is wrong with it.

There is a also a normal working read/write noise... as if something is getting churned inside...

yes thats what i have in all 3 of mine.i just play music at the same time.problem solved

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  • 2 weeks later...

Just to make sure - this is for the read/write sound? If that is the case, thanks a lot, my PC is pretty quiet except for this, sometimes it sounds like its torturing itself.

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Just to make sure - this is for the read/write sound? If that is the case, thanks a lot, my PC is pretty quiet except for this, sometimes it sounds like its torturing itself.

Yes.

No harm in trying.. So...Give it a try. :rolleyes:

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If that's so I'll try it. This sounds are the only thing that's ever really bothered me but I never imagined it can be changed with software. Thanks :rolleyes:

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  • 2 months later...

I've tried this... But it slows down my system enormously! Seek time went way up... And actually i don't give a shit about what noise my pc makes, if it isn't too loud.

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lol mine is Ok... but i wont give it a try cus messing with does settings... im not takin that risk lol but sounds good :dance2:

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lol mine is Ok... but i wont give it a try cus messing with does settings... im not takin that risk lol but sounds good ;)

if it works,don't fix it.

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  • 6 months later...

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