RAM (or possibly something else) noise?
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El Corazon wrote:
Actually I too hear beyond "average" human hearing
Dunno what your range is, but for me, TVs are a pain to be near when they show nothing on the screen...even to the point where I had to ask one of my teachers in school to turn the TV off, as there was a powerpoint streaming to it, and it was annoying. It was hard to explain to the teacher...... :/
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
Anton, do not panic! :) You are not alone :)) I do hear high-frequency sound sometimes when just scrolling text when most of cooling fans are running on low speed :) (I have LCD monitor, sound seems to be coming from motherboard). AFAIK such problems occur very frequently, my second (older) computer has even more 'loud' sound in some cases (and there was even thread on hardware forum for specific motherboard of those computer, many others suffered from it). Some notebooks have similar problems too. I believe that in most cases this sound is caused by circuits of motherboard powering CPU. Modern CPUs consume a lot of energy and exact amount of energy that is needed depends on task of CPU. Those rapid changes in power consumption may cause such noise in power circuit near CPU (some people believe it is caused by inductances vibrating, somebody even tried to fix it by superglue on most 'noisy' inductance :)) personally I'm not going to try to fix it this way, I'm just saying that there could be cases when hi-frequency sounds are caused mostly by one component on motherboard) I have found interesting study about such noises - Acoustic cryptanalysis (I hope it is not dedicated to 1st of April :))) ) - http://people.csail.mit.edu/tromer/acoustic/ It is about possibility to use such sound for cryptoanalysis, and they state that sound (interesting for their purpose) are usually higher than 10kHz (so 'high-frequency audible hiss' seems to be suitable for such sounds perfectly :) ). Igor.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
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Yeah, happened to me too some years ago, at an old PC. Have you tried using another monitor? Maybe if a friend has a new LCD one, you could give it a try, can't hurt...
I would suggest trying a new monitor too. I had a similar problem with "buzzing" noise caused by certain applications and mouse movement. Some type of frequency interference i think. New monitor worked for me. I also had a noise problem with an old laptop that i never figured out...perhaps it was just at the end of its life.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
hi, i have this problem too. in fact it source are a: fan controller's manual volume control wich produces "flanger" noise wich is finally send out by my tuner AND b: the voltage converters.... i even hear it when the pc is idle (the volume control thing). i assume its a whistling sound wich occurs on your pc. thats the noise wich is often produced by these voltage converters. try to locate them and listen... but. hey...even if you are able to locate the noise source you have to replace the mobo to (propably) fix it.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
Hi Anton!
Anton Afanasyev wrote:
something inside my computer produces a noise
I've often had similar experience. Im my case it was the keyboard cable inducing noise into the speaker ciruitry. To much more extent cellular phones have such effect onto various electric ciruitry. Do you have active speakers? You may try to insolate speaker cables from keyboard cables or use shielded cables.
Jasper
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
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Well, ive though about it already...took the case off, and its coming somewhere from...either RAM, video card, or the motherboard itself. Not exactly easy to isolate. Whats worse, is that the closer i listen to it(ie, bring my ear closer to each of these components), the less I can hear the sound. Ah well, I'll wait some time until maybe somebody has any other suggestions (doubt it though, a very broad/unanswerable question :/ ). Over the weekend I just might try removing RAM sticks one by one (i got 4..oh joy), see if that makes a difference. Then maybe swap the video card...ahh, sounds like a fun weekend away from code :laugh:
I can also hear this high pitched noise, it's even more evident when you put the computer to sleep (not hibernate). Try that with your case open and it should be easier to isolate.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
Anton Afanasyev wrote:
but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant
Im the same... but my psyciatrist said that the voices arnt real. :laugh: But seriously, I would check the moving parts first (fans, HDD, CD/DVD, etc), and if they are all fine, maybe you just are sensitive to certain frequencies or something. I know i hear the high pitch screaming from monitors and TVs and stuff like that.
"There are three sides to every story. Yours, mine and the truth" ~ unknown
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
If you're running Vista, it's probably internally bitching about you using something so simple and un-bloated. However, a couple of months ago I started to notice a similar noise that would happen anytime the process was in constant use. After a month it was really noticable. Two weeks later it was noticable sitting idle, and loud when the processor was pegged. Then is started spontaneously rebooting. Checked hardware monitors in the BIOS and noticed that the power supply fan was running low RPMs. I replaced the PS two weeks ago, and it's feeling much better now.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
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Well, ive though about it already...took the case off, and its coming somewhere from...either RAM, video card, or the motherboard itself. Not exactly easy to isolate. Whats worse, is that the closer i listen to it(ie, bring my ear closer to each of these components), the less I can hear the sound. Ah well, I'll wait some time until maybe somebody has any other suggestions (doubt it though, a very broad/unanswerable question :/ ). Over the weekend I just might try removing RAM sticks one by one (i got 4..oh joy), see if that makes a difference. Then maybe swap the video card...ahh, sounds like a fun weekend away from code :laugh:
It can't be the RAM, they have no moving parts. I would bet on a fan or the power supply. That reminds me of a story... I had a processor fan that was starting to die, at first it sounded like a cable was slightly too close the the blades. But then it stopped running. If you thumped it, it would start and run, it just couldn't get started on it's own. So I went to Best Buy looking for a new fan, and this Best Buy kid tried to tell me that it was the heat sink and not the fan that was making noise. So for 10 minutes, I made him try to explain to me how the heat sink could make broken fan noises. He tried, it was good entertainment.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
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I would suggest trying a new monitor too. I had a similar problem with "buzzing" noise caused by certain applications and mouse movement. Some type of frequency interference i think. New monitor worked for me. I also had a noise problem with an old laptop that i never figured out...perhaps it was just at the end of its life.
That's true, some old CRTs can make noise especially when there's a lot of white background (for some odd reason). But it sounds like you're hearing it in the case.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
I hear your pain. Those stupid UltraSonic Pest repellers irrate me to no end. I had my hearing tested in the service, but it was a very comprehensive test because of the job I did and I was way above and below the normal specturm for hearing. Is it only this program? Any others? Well here are a few things to try: Get a stethscope or make a cone(and use it like a stethscope) and try to isolate the sound. It will let you pinpoint better while blocking the surrounding sounds. Check your fans mine bug me if the get out of balance because of dust. Vantec makes some really quiet ones. My MB varies the speed of the fans due to load and when my computer is working really hard the sound get more noticable. If you think it is the monitor try a ferrite on your cable. You might try your mouse and/or keyboard, but I would be more interesed why you are getting static on this lines? Is it really dry where you are? Do you shuffle your feet wearing wool socks across the carpet and electricute you PC for fun?(jk) Is the outlet that your system plugged into really grounded or is the ground not deep enough or not attached completely? Seperate all power cables from device cables as much as possible. Use a UPS/power conditioner. Even a cheap one with a small battery is better than nothing and a world of difference than just a power strip even with "Power Conditioners", but together even better. - Individuality: Always remember that you are unique. Just like everybody else. www.despair.com
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Yeah, happened to me too some years ago, at an old PC. Have you tried using another monitor? Maybe if a friend has a new LCD one, you could give it a try, can't hurt...
My old 8086 with no hard drive made some high-frequency sounds that would vary in frequency when certain tasks were performed. It was at the foot of the basement stairs for a time and I could tell when it was on just hearing it at the top.
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El Corazon wrote:
Actually I too hear beyond "average" human hearing
Dunno what your range is, but for me, TVs are a pain to be near when they show nothing on the screen...even to the point where I had to ask one of my teachers in school to turn the TV off, as there was a powerpoint streaming to it, and it was annoying. It was hard to explain to the teacher...... :/
Anton Afanasyev wrote:
TVs are a pain to be near when they show nothing on the screen
I used to be able to here the horizontal oscillator in old style CRT based TVs. Dunno if it was the CRT deflection coils or the flyback transformer whining, but it used to drive me nuts, too. Alas, as I have gotten older, my hearing has declined and I don't notice it so much... or maybe it's because there are less and less CRTs around these days...
WE ARE DYSLEXIC OF BORG. Refutance is systile. Your a$$ will be laminated.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
You need a tin foil hat :) It's probably doing a software loop that causes some minor power fluctuation. Notepad's pretty ancient, and I think it used to spin on the CPU while it ran. IIRC, MS did something to it to make it not spin on the CPU, but they sure didn't rewrite it from scratch (all the same bugs still remain).. they probably just put some short sleep in the loop or something. So, it is possible it could be doing short bursts of work, which could be causing short power fluctuations. They'd most likely show up through the speakers, so physically disconnect them (don't just mute them) and see if it goes away. It's also possible, although less likely, that they just happen to match the mechanical resonant frequency of some part in the power system. Sort of like the old play-music-from-your-PC-through-your-AM-radio, from back in the stone ages when computers didn't have speakers (or sound hardware at all) -- tuned software loops could cause EMI interference that got picked up on AM radios as different frequencies. That was a pretty cool hack, actually.. we all knew you could get an audible system status by listending to it on an AM radio.. waiting for input had a different sound than running this or that part of a program, etc. Someone wrote some tuned software loops, and viola, music through the AM EMI :) But I digress.
patbob
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Yeah, happened to me too some years ago, at an old PC. Have you tried using another monitor? Maybe if a friend has a new LCD one, you could give it a try, can't hurt...
I've had a couple of big shiny new CRT monitors from different companies. My current one is a Dell, I don't remember what the other one was. I don't know a lot about CRT technology, but on both of them I've found the following: When I turn the resolution up to max, sometimes applications with a mostly white background produce a buzzing sound. When I minimize the apps or move another app in front of them the buzzing stops. Sometimes resizing the apps to make them smaller stops the buzzing. When I set the screen resolution to something in the middle of the monitor's range, I don't get any buzzing at all. I have my current monitor because the previous one stopped working. The local monitor repair guy said that running a monitor at its max settings will burn it out a lot faster and that's probably what happened to mine. What can I say? I like resolution. Thomas Bates I want to live in Theory. Everything works in Theory. (uncredited)
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
Does the sound go away when you plug in your headphones? Do you have a speaker mounted in your computer? I've had oddball sounds like that when there was crosstalk on the internal the speaker from various other components. You might pull off the case and just see where the speaker is and if the speaker wires are near anything else. You might even just unplug the speaker and move the speaker wires away from everything and see if it still makes the noise.
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Just noticed this: while I'm in Notepad2, and i start typing stuff, something inside my computer produces a noise. A crackling/buzzing/frying/ANNOYING very high-pitched noise. Nobody else I've asked can hear it, but then again, there are many things that I can hear and people around me cant. Same thing happens when I scroll inside Notepad2. Now, whilst this doesnt happen outside of Notepad2, I dont think its an issue that is specific to this program alone, I think that something got messed up in my system. Anyone else has had this kind of noise? Any pointers? Thanks. /me puts on headphones and doubles the volume...
Hey! I hear the same kind of noice at the same situations! But in my case not only occurs with the notepad but with all programs! I really don't know what is it... Don't worry, the sound isn't inside your head jejexD
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It can't be the RAM, they have no moving parts. I would bet on a fan or the power supply. That reminds me of a story... I had a processor fan that was starting to die, at first it sounded like a cable was slightly too close the the blades. But then it stopped running. If you thumped it, it would start and run, it just couldn't get started on it's own. So I went to Best Buy looking for a new fan, and this Best Buy kid tried to tell me that it was the heat sink and not the fan that was making noise. So for 10 minutes, I made him try to explain to me how the heat sink could make broken fan noises. He tried, it was good entertainment.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.