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March 4, 2008 8:43 AM PST

How do you find a quiet laptop?--Ask the Editors

by Daniel A. Begun
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CNET reader Georg Frausing asks:

It is difficult to find some of the tested laptops with the lowest noise level. Any suggesting how to find them?

The noisiest parts of a laptop are likely to be its internal fans, the hard disk drive, and the optical drive. The hotter a laptop's internals get, the louder the fans are likely to be. (Note: not all laptops have internal fans.) You can actually play around with this on a MacBook using the freeware utility, smfFanControl. Depending on how good a job the laptop manufacturer did designing the laptop, sometimes a spinning hard disk drive causes a laptop to emit noise via sympathetic vibrations. Some optical drives can be noisemakers as well--especially when they spin up to speed or spin down. This can be especially annoying during the quiet portions of a DVD movie. CNET Labs does not conduct noise tests on laptops, and I know of no sites or publications that regularly do this type of testing.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

You could conduct anecdotal testing yourself, but the results would be very limited in usefulness. Assuming you could even get access to all the laptops you wanted to compare, you would need to test them in an environment that was fairly well protected from environmental noise. When we toyed with this type of testing ourselves, the best we could do was an environment of about a 30 dbA--a far cry from the coveted 10 to 20 dbA range typically found in professional anechoic chambers. At the laptops section of a Best Buy, you'd be hard-pressed to detect the whine of a spinning fan over the din of your fellow shoppers and that man in the audio section blasting The White Stripes.

But let's assume that your best friend is an acoustical engineer with access to a space conductive to this type of testing. To test how noisy the fans are, you'd want the laptop to be operating a heavy workload for an extended period of time. A good way to do that would be to play as high-end a game as the laptop supports at the highest playable settings for at least a half hour with the room's air conditioning turned off. You would measure the noise using a sound pressure meter. You'd want to hold the meter at the exact same angle and distance from each laptop to test each one the same way. One of the many problems with this approach, however, is that you wouldn't necessarily be using the same workload on each laptop, so you wouldn't stress all of the laptops the same way. To test the hard disk noise, choose a workload that uses lots of nonsequential disk seeks--such as defragmenting a heavily fragmented hard drive.

Another variable mucking up the works is that no two laptops of even the same make and model are guaranteed to have identical characteristics. Minor variations in manufacturing--especially over time--can render different results on different units.

I've attended many conferences where industry pundits put out a call to manufacturers to focus more on acoustic issues in regards to computer design. The attendees all nod their heads in agreement, but I can't say I've really seen (heard?) laptops get any quieter. These same evangelists also call for improved thermal designs, but many recent laptops I've used still manage to actually warm my lap to uncomfortable temperatures.

This is a simple question with a complicated answer. Using earplugs or headphones is not the answer when you are trying to spare others the noise from your laptop. For instance, being a new dad, I've had to adjust my computing behavior at home so as not to wake my daughter with a noisy computer.

So how does a consumer identify a relatively quiet or especially noisy laptop? A Google search of the text "quiet laptops" points you to a number of user-contributed forums where real-world users chime in with their own acoustic experiences. If the noise level of a laptop is an important purchasing decision for you, we want to know. Perhaps we'll revisit doing this type of testing. Post a comment and let us know how important this is to you.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (16 Comments)
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Are you serious?
by mkesterco March 4, 2008 9:05 AM PST
Try this:

a)Turn the volume down
b)Turn it off
c)get an XO laptop with no moving parts & thus zero noise
Reply to this comment
by frankv--2008 September 6, 2009 10:31 PM PDT
I hope YOU are not serious...
Are you serious?
by mkesterco March 4, 2008 9:05 AM PST
Try this:

a)Turn the volume down
b)Turn it off
c)get an XO laptop with no moving parts & thus zero noise
Reply to this comment
Quiet a necessity
by texasuser March 4, 2008 9:29 AM PST
I am easily disturbed by noisy computers. I frequently close down everything on my notebook and make sure I am on a web page with no processes running in order to stay connected to the web when I am doing something else. Even so, I find the noises disruptive sometimes. Quiet is one of the things I like about the eee pc.
Reply to this comment
Quiet a necessity
by texasuser March 4, 2008 9:29 AM PST
I am easily disturbed by noisy computers. I frequently close down everything on my notebook and make sure I am on a web page with no processes running in order to stay connected to the web when I am doing something else. Even so, I find the noises disruptive sometimes. Quiet is one of the things I like about the eee pc.
Reply to this comment
Of course!!
by laser21 March 4, 2008 10:40 AM PST
Its one of the most important features for me. As is weight. I hate when there are notebook specs, but no weight! For gods sake its a notebook! I would like to carry it around!!
Recently I changed a hdd to ssd, Im totally loving it! It was the only part that moved in my fujitsu q2010, now its really silent. Cool.
Reply to this comment
Of course!!
by laser21 March 4, 2008 10:40 AM PST
Its one of the most important features for me. As is weight. I hate when there are notebook specs, but no weight! For gods sake its a notebook! I would like to carry it around!!
Recently I changed a hdd to ssd, Im totally loving it! It was the only part that moved in my fujitsu q2010, now its really silent. Cool.
Reply to this comment
Quiet Laptops: A necessity
by Kev50027 March 4, 2008 6:47 PM PST
I usually only purchase Sony Vaio laptops because they tend to be the quietest. I got a Gateway once and it was so loud and annoying that it was useless in classes. When looking for a laptop, I search all reviews I can find for any information about how loud it is, and I would LOVE if Cnet offered this, as they are my #1 source of reviews.
Reply to this comment
Quiet Laptops: A necessity
by Kev50027 March 4, 2008 6:47 PM PST
I usually only purchase Sony Vaio laptops because they tend to be the quietest. I got a Gateway once and it was so loud and annoying that it was useless in classes. When looking for a laptop, I search all reviews I can find for any information about how loud it is, and I would LOVE if Cnet offered this, as they are my #1 source of reviews.
Reply to this comment
Students need 'em...
by omphalos11 March 5, 2008 9:20 AM PST
Quiet is incredibly important, especially for laptops for students! Noisy fans in the library are bad, but in the classroom it is egregious. I had a Fujitsu T4020 convertible tablet, and had to make sure I kept minimum processes (OneNote, maybe firefox, nothing else) running while in class. Anything more, and that darn fan would spool up like a jet engine. Anyone know if that cheap HP (tx series) tablet is any quieter?
Reply to this comment
Students need 'em...
by omphalos11 March 5, 2008 9:20 AM PST
Quiet is incredibly important, especially for laptops for students! Noisy fans in the library are bad, but in the classroom it is egregious. I had a Fujitsu T4020 convertible tablet, and had to make sure I kept minimum processes (OneNote, maybe firefox, nothing else) running while in class. Anything more, and that darn fan would spool up like a jet engine. Anyone know if that cheap HP (tx series) tablet is any quieter?
Reply to this comment
by pascal0211 April 23, 2008 2:24 AM PDT
I've looked for a quiet laptop for many years. Recently, I've bought a Samsung Q40 which is fanless. The only remaining noise was the hard disk and I didn't found a SSD disk to replace it. Now, I run Ubuntu (Linux) on a flash disk, an USB key or even the embedded SD card reader, and my PC is totally quiet.
Reply to this comment
by tmsom August 16, 2008 12:03 PM PDT
My first computer was an Apple IIe. No sound at all. My 1st 2 laptops were a 286 & 386sx -- very close to no sound. I got spoiled. I won't buy modern laptops. Today we are told to accept howling noise as the price of GUI and MS's need for ever more obscure bloatware. A laptop is a supplemental device and there is very little substantive productivity or ease of use from bloatware I didn't get from DOSware like Quatro 5.5 or WP 6 or SAS. My 1st MP3 player ran on DOS. Today we can have both worlds in linux. I absolutely need quiet and I could have it w/o MS.
Reply to this comment
by thefinepanamama February 23, 2009 5:36 PM PST
Anyone who does audio recording would appreciate knowing this information.
Reply to this comment
by beastinwith March 29, 2009 8:23 PM PDT
One of my primary concerns when buying a new computer is choosing one that won't make too much noise. I don't expect recording studio quality silence, but I want a machine that doesn't annoy myself and others. Unfortunately, as this article points out, it's hard to determine which are the quiet machines.
Reply to this comment
by ErinMoody September 6, 2009 6:12 AM PDT
Greetings,

I'd be very interested in the results of any noise testing CNET might conduct on laptops. I have a Compaq Presario 2100 laptop and its a great machine, but overheats very easily and the fan is so loud, it takes away from my enjoyment of the computer. I'm searching for a new laptop and a quieter fan is definitely something I'm looking for.
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