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Quieting Your G5? 190

metajunkie wants to take a bite out of this issue: "I recently set up an at-home recording studio with a DP G5 and a ProTools mBox. Problem is, I can't record (like, say, a voice over) anywhere near the computer because when the cooling fans kick in, it comes in way too loud over the mic. I can't move the computer into another room, and while I'm tempted to throw a blanket over the thing, I don't think that'll help. Does anyone know a place that sells a silencer box for the G5 or some good DIY way to cut out the noise?"
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Quieting Your G5?

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  • by Oculus Habent ( 562837 ) * <oculus.habent@gm ... Nom minus author> on Monday March 01, 2004 @01:56PM (#8431049) Journal
    Good luck. This is a really crappy way to do it, but...

    You could set it up in an independantly vented sound-dampened box. Run two pieces of dryer hose out of the room and put some 50+ cfm fans on the ends. Build a case cover to seal the hoses onto - cardboard & blankets to go cheap, brown bread [b-quiet.com] or something intended for the purpose is more expensive. You could try polyester batting, possibly.

    Anyway, it's a crappy plan, reminiscent of even cheaper [afrotechmods.com] mods.

    You need some kind of partition, box, etc. How much you are willing to spend is the big issue.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      I would suggest putting the computer in a cabinet type thing and then stuffing the empty space with pillows.

      Keeps the processer nice and cozy too. Happy processers equal better speed.
    • Move the damn mac (Score:5, Informative)

      by MrChuck ( 14227 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:03PM (#8432874)
      You don't want things with fans in a room with an open mic (not "mike", people).

      I've recorded a lot. In pro, semi pro settings and in converted barns. Especially when doing voices, you want a SILENT room. A little acoustic padding on the walls, but perhaps not. I've taken dead rooms (too dead) and hung maple plaques up to liven it a little bit.

      But machines with fans go OUTSIDE, even if temporarily. I've tossed a laptop out of a room because the DISK was non-silent.

      That might mean you rig up a closet as a voice room (you can even leave the clothes in it). It might mean you run the mac in the hall for 5 minutes while you record.

      But no fans near mics. And no deep mods to your case. A dual processor 1GHz machine in a tight space needs lots of airflow.

      • by Golias ( 176380 )
        an open mic (not "mike", people).

        Both are correct these days. It's short for "microphone," but "mike" is a common alternate spelling for it. I've even seen it on the packaging from some microphones I've bought. Dictionary.com lists both spellings as legit, too. [reference.com]

        Sort of like how "Coke" is short for "Coca-cola" but is not spelled "Coc," is it?

        Railing against it is as useless as complaining about "catsup" being spelled "ketchup." Language evolves with usage, and "mike" is becoming the more common spelling

      • Exactly, there's no way you're gonna get that computer silent enough. How about building a small "voice recording closet" in the room? If you do it in a corner, it doesn't require much material at all.
  • Under the desk (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    That should help...

    Stick it under the desk or in a cabinet.
  • Mike (Score:2, Informative)

    by addaon ( 41825 )
    Use a directional microphone.
    • Re:Mike (Score:5, Informative)

      by 00420 ( 706558 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:15PM (#8431335)
      Depending on the quality of recordings he's looking for, this may not do it. A directional microphone will still pick up what bounces off the walls (much more than you would imagine).

      If you've got the money you may want to try something like this [sweetwater.com]
      • Wall bounces are easy to fix. Buy some cheap comforters and hang them on the walls, and maybe throw some pillows in the corners. It'll also improve the quality of the recordings since it won't have the wall bounces of whatever's being recorded, too.
        • Re:Mike (Score:5, Informative)

          by Golias ( 176380 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @03:21PM (#8432365)
          Right. Also, if you can't move the PC, move the microphone!

          If you are actually serious about professional quality, you probably want the microphone in an isolated chamber anyway, otherwise you will lose a take every time your thermostat turns on your house's furnace and/or air conditioning. A G5 fan is nothing compared to the constant drone of your home's ventilation.

          If you like to sit at the computer as you record, perhaps the way to go would be one of those Wireless keyboard and mouse sets that Apple sells.

          • Re:Mike (Score:3, Interesting)

            by skinfitz ( 564041 )
            A G5 fan is nothing compared to the constant drone of your home's ventilation.

            That's FANS (x9) and have you actually heard a G5 blowing it's fans at full speed? If you have home ventilation that the G5 in comparison sounds like "nothing" to, then I'd call the aircon engineer as you have problems.

            If you want an idea of what it sounds like, take the plastic cover off.
  • by SSpade ( 549608 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:06PM (#8431208) Homepage

    You don't need all that G5 power for recording. On my G4 laptop I can go into energy saver in system preferences and set the processor performance to 'Reduced'. That burns less power, creates less heat and the fans don't turn on. You may be able to do the same on your desktop.

    Also, if you have a lot of junk software on the machine burning CPU cycles it's going to create more heat and more noise. Shut down power-hungry apps.

  • by revscat ( 35618 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:06PM (#8431210) Journal
    I just bought a G5 about a month ago, and I have to say it's one of the quietest boxes I've ever owned. The only time the fans were really loud was when I removed the case; they seem to be able to sense air flow, and adjust their speed accordingly. But when the case is closed and the inner plastic shielding is propertly in place, everything is hunky dory, i.e.: QUIET.
    • by smoondog ( 85133 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:25PM (#8431476)
      Me too. This almost sounds like FUD trolling. I have a dual G5 2.0 and while it is noisier than my G4 laptop, it is an order of magnitude quiter than any other desktop machine I have owned. The drive makes no noise at all and only the fan makes any real noise.

      -Sean
      • It's not a troll, if the poster cares enough about audio to blow vast amounts of shift-4 on Pro-Tools, then he's after some seriously high-end results. The G5 is a quiet machine but it's a long way from being totally silent.

        My advice is for the poster to do whatever is necessary to put the G5 in a different room. This doesn't have to involve moving the G5 though, maybe the answer is to turn the problem round, and get a dedicated vocal booth to record in?

        Other things to do do are ensure that the mac is no
    • there is quiet and then there is 'quiet'.

      it all depends on what you compare it against, in a quiet room a computer that is relatively quiet can sound like it's a hurricane when the fans kick in(the fans in g5 are temperature controlled afaik).

      my main pc is nowadays pretty quiet, but it is still audible. however when you compare against a 'usual' modern pc it's 'totally silent'(thanks to the psu fan being the ONLY fan in that system, cpu+gpu are watercooled and the water is kept cool enough by just having
      • there is quiet and then there is 'quiet'.

        I'm pretty sure the official noise scale is from "fanless/diskless mini-ITX" at the low end to "Sun Ultra 60" at the high end. There is an additional scale for loud noises going from "Sun Ultra 60" to "ear next to jet engine exhaust."

      • I opted for all quiet components when I rebuilt my system. It is now much quiter than before and during the day while other people are running around the house or talking to me it is very quiet. When house AC turns on it is louder to me. Still, in the still of night however I percieve it to be very loud.
    • Same here. I can hear the three Boxx-brand blades in the other room, and the PC on the desk across from me, and the HVAC, but not the dual 2GHz G5 under my desk. I suspect the poster has a faulty box, or the clear plastic air guide inside is misplaced.
    • Ditto here. Very quiet. In fact, I had originally purchased an XServe to host my stuff in the house. But after I heard rumors of how loud they are, I switched to a DP G5 and I'm glad I did. We actually have it the living room where we watch TV and I don't hear a peep out of it.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      > The only time the fans were really loud was when I removed the case; they seem to be able to sense air flow, and adjust their speed accordingly.

      Actually there's a microswitch that senses the plastic shield being removed and turns the fans up to make sure that the cooling is preserved.
    • He said "when the fans turn on" If he's recording and encoding on the fly (Btw, OP: don't encode on the fly, that might solve your problem right there) and the hard drive's been spinning for a while, the fans will turn on and the thing can get lound. The oly time this has ever happened to me was ehrn i ran the hardware test thing, but if he's getting heavy fan load, it can get as loud as a PC.
  • This is an odd question. I've never used ProTools, but I have had no problem at all with fan noise while recording voice overs in Final Cut Pro.

    That being said, here are a few notes that should help you.

    The G5's fans are very nicely fine-tuned to CPU usage and temperature. The more heavily you use your G5, the louder they are.

    So you might be able to solve this problem by minimizing usage. Quit your email program, your web browser, and any other programs you have open. Many of them burn CPU cycles even when they appear to be doing nothing. Quit every program other than Protools.

    I don't know much about ProTools itself - I use Final Cut Pro and After Effects - so this is just general advice. If you're playing tracks through your headphones that you don't need for the voiceover, turn them off. If ProTools has a draft playback mode to minimize CPU usage, turn it on.

    If you don't already have it there, put your PowerMac G5 under your desk. It sure looks pretty on top of it, but it will make a lot less noise if it's even a little further from your microphone. In an extreme case, you might want to run long cables to it and store it in a more distant part of the room.

    If you are running a lot of programs on your system, quit everything but ProTools while doing the voice over, and tell it to play a bare minimum of tracks through the headset.

    Put your microphone on a stand and make sure it's close to your face. Get one of those absurd looking anti-poppers (someone at Guitar Center or similar stores can find one for you). Then make sure you're using the bare minimum recorrding volume needed to get a strong signal from your voice.

    Put your PowerMac G5 in back of your microphone. Most microphones are pretty directional. If yours is not, get a shotgun mic designed to pick up mainly what's in front of it.

    I've never had any trouble recording from Final Cut Pro's voice over tool, but it's possible that is less CPU intensive than Protools. If ProTools is the CPU hog, you might want to use your copy of Final Cut (Final Cut Express is just $299) to record the song and then transfer the audio track to Protools. Final Cut is not the be all and end all of audio, but you can certainly lay out other audio tracks and play them into your headphones.

    Hope this helps.

    D
    • I have a friend with ProTools - and the damn program runs 100% cpu all the time - whether you're doing something or not. It does that so that it's always "ready to go" when you need to do something intensive. I find this unneeded, but what do I know, I'm not a sound tech.
    • Anything from Avid or digidesign is going to suck your CPU dry, even if it's a 14THz quad with the cosmic quantum option. [cynic] Means they can leverage their proprietary hardware better. [/cynic] It also means they can guarantee throughput and latency.

      Another option for voiceovers is to use a simple recording tool, there are some free and or cheap programs on freshmeat or versiontracker, and they won't use the entire energy output of Hydro Quebec to do it.
  • Cable extensions (Score:5, Informative)

    by ptolemu ( 322917 ) * <pateym@NospAM.mcmaster.ca> on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:07PM (#8431225) Homepage Journal
    "I can't move the computer into another room"

    Is the reason for this simply that cables are too short? It may seem a little unprofessional but why not buy an extension cable for your monitor [homenethelp.com] and keyboard [homenethelp.com] so that you can move away from the computer?
    • btw, apple sells wireless keyboards and mice.
    • Re:Cable extensions (Score:3, Informative)

      by forkazoo ( 138186 )
      Or, get something like a fanless VIA EPIA box running VNC. Perfectly silent. Runs fast over 100 Mb ethernet, and you still have all the power of your G5 for applying filters, and effects very fast. I am just about ready to make a fanless box for my own use because my Athlon 64 is too loud to comfortably sleep next to while doing renders or large downloads over night. Not as bad as some of my Sun boxen, tho... Anyhow, I think everything with fans will go in the closet, and I'll just VNC into my Sun/Mac/
  • by sinergy ( 88242 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:11PM (#8431283) Homepage
    The only real solution is to record in a separate room. Run the mic into the shower, you'll get some nice reverb effects. ;)
    • by blackmonday ( 607916 ) * on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:37PM (#8433229) Homepage
      This has been modded funny, but this is an actual studio trick that's been used for many years. Bathrooms have pretty good acoustic qualities and built-in reverb. For a budget home musician, I'd sing in the shower instead of pay studio time for vocals. Run your mic cable from the shower/bathroom to your pre, into your mac in the other room. You might be surprised by good results.

      • by sinergy ( 88242 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @06:16PM (#8434233) Homepage
        You're exactly right. This isn't funny. I was being serious. Showers are great for acoustic guitar as well. I used to work in a studio, and we'd send acoustic players into this bathroom that was tiled from floor to ceiling. It sounded better than a few thousand dollars worth of reverb rackmounts, depending on mic placement.
      • I've heard (but not confirmed) that Jim Morrison did his best work sitting on the toilet in his bathroom. Equipment was hauled in to record it.

        None of the people who have told me this story have been able to tell me if his pants were on at the time.

  • by gqgreg ( 84354 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:12PM (#8431307) Homepage
    I know a musician who keeps his tower in the closet next to his desk, and all peripherals are connected via long cables. I also remember reading an article about some band in Sound on Sound magazine that has this kind of set up as well.
    • I've got an sff x86 box in my closet screaming away like a Baptist forced to watch Janet sing to her bare tit right now. Ironically, I bought it for size and style, thinking that if I had to run Windoze then at least I'd have this smart looking little silver toaster thingee on my desk. Right. That was before I heard it. I'd beat the bastard with a baseball bat if it wasn't required for work.

      With wireless keyboard and mouse, we're talking only 3 long cables (power, monitor, net) under the door and the d

  • by jwriney ( 16598 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:16PM (#8431350) Homepage
    You should attempt to move the computer as far away from your recording area as possible to reduce noise. My room in South Carolina would serve nicely.

    --riney
  • These babies run silent. [lostbrain.com]

    tcd004
  • They make sound deadening material (for audiophiles for stereos). You could put this around your G5 to quite it down quite a bit. You know, line the inside "walls" of your desk where the G5 is..

  • Mic cables are pretty cheap, so it shouldn't be too hard to record on the other side of the room or in an adjacent room

    you might try lowering the power usage/performance setting in the control panels as well as quiting any applications that you are not using

    failing that, if protools sucks up so much power, perhaps you should record with audacity and mix in protools?

    I'm actually suprised that this is a problem for you

    I routinely record 3 channels with my delta 1010lt while surfing the web and having a ha
  • by bjpirt ( 251795 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:30PM (#8431583)
    Rather than trying to quieten each individual component, this guy [overclockers.com] made a surrounding box which has a sound baffle so that everything is silenced.

    He does seem to consider the importance of airflow as well, since what point is there in putting your shiny new G5 in a soundproof box if it cooks itself?
  • by visionsofmcskill ( 556169 ) <vision AT getmp DOT com> on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:32PM (#8431618) Homepage Journal
    Ive been using Macs and protools for ten years now, and empathize with your situation. I will give you several suggestions, the last one being a direct answer to your particular problem.

    1: ideal siuation
    If in any way possible AT ALL... i would either place your computing station , or your vocal area in a seperate room (a closet will do just fine), this is by far the best solution for a multitude of reasons... in all honesty you want a recording booth (large closet) with padding (bubble wrap works well, foam, etc...). If that isnt possible, you can do the inverse (a very small computing room with the main room being the recording environment.

    2: A strong possibility
    Place the machine in a closet or place a large and strong divider in your main room... extend a KVM ... or an extension to your monitor cable from behind the closet/divider to a monitor on the other side (in the main room)... wireless keyboards and mice are very helpfull for this.

    3: Remote access
    extend only the audio cables needed from the box behind a closet/divider... and use a seperete computer (a laptop is best) to remotly access your G5... since wireless will work with this connection... your laptop can roam wherever you want, and you can control your session as if connected localy. (apples RDP ... or you can use open source VNC to remotly connect).

    4: if there is no other way
    If you cannot in any way place the box into a closet or a seperete room, then you can build a computer box. I dont recomend this because it can be dangerous to your computer. Basicly create or buy a large box big enough to fit your G5 inside. Create TWO large holes in it (2 inch diameter). Before placing the computer inside, youll want to pad the walls of your new case with carpetting, foam, bubble wrap, cloth or some other sound absorbant material... once complete use one hole to route all your cables through minding the power cable not to be to close to any aound cables (with the mbox, the mbox should be OUTSIDE of the box, connected by the USB cable), once your cables are routed... seal the hole as best as you can with more cloth if possible. For the second hole you can leave it as is... however it's purpose as a ventilation is not well suited to the G5 and should truly be accompanied by a Fan (on the inside of the case) blowing out air through a tube.... which most people fit to go out of their window.

    Many tweaks on this setup have been done depending on the needs of the environment... some people put a real AC inside their computer-box, others simply run their machines in the box, but when not recording, open the front of it. I personaly recomend getting the computer into a seperete room somehow. even if its just a small closet.

    YMMV

  • by Red_Winestain ( 243346 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:39PM (#8431748)
    Have you opened up your G5? It is (fairly) common for people to put their G5's together incorrectly. A slight mis-alignment of all the sound-related parts can cause the fans to run amok.
  • by Apreche ( 239272 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:40PM (#8431766) Homepage Journal
    A lot of the other posters have provided simple and practical solutions to the problem, such as directional microphones and putting the pc in another room.

    I just wanted to offer the rich eccentric solution. Buy noise cancellers. They exist. Pretty much what they do is listen to the ambient noise in a room, and then begin emitting a sound wave that almost perfectly cancels out the others in the room. Problem is if you start humming a single not for a duration it will cancel it out.

    If all else fails.
  • gCab (Score:5, Informative)

    by pcrook345 ( 410396 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:42PM (#8431816)
    Check out the gCab [acoustilock.com] . It's huge and expensive, but man, does it cut down the sound. I'm using one with an older Shuttle cube, and the noise level has gone from maddening to a mere whisper. The iMac next to it is a lot louder.
  • Quiet Boxes (Score:5, Informative)

    by WayneConrad ( 312222 ) * <wconradNO@SPAMyagni.com> on Monday March 01, 2004 @02:49PM (#8431932) Homepage

    This was sorta covered back in A Practical Approach to Shushing your PC [slashdot.org], especially in the many replies.

    These guys [elias-audio.net] make sound deadening boxes for AV people.

  • Another $0 solution (Score:2, Interesting)

    by ArmorFiend ( 151674 )
    Take an old towel, cut it into squares, and stick the squares to the inside of your mac's box with tape. Helps quite a bit!
    • by Mikey-San ( 582838 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @06:41PM (#8434436) Homepage Journal
      Right, because that's not going to alter the thermal properties of the case design.

      Sticking a lint-laced towel inside your nine-fan, four-cooling-zone, twenty-one-temperature-sensor G5 surely isn't a bright way of going about cutting back on the noise--unless when it shuts off from choking on towel lint or overheats. Then it's /really/ quiet.
      • Gimmie a break, this isn't rocket science. There's still plenty of other metal exposed which absorbs the heat, and metal conducts heat well, so its just like the towel isn't there. As to the lint issue: don't use a lint-prone towel (duh). I've been running years with this solution, and that computer's doing fine from a thermal standpoint.

        (Plastic-fatigue on the PS2 ports is another story. I may trash it when the keyboard jack finally breaks.)
  • Some ideas (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jzellis ( 177099 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @03:07PM (#8432165) Homepage
    In studios, the Macs are usually on the other side of a glass partition, i.e. in the mixing room with the engineers and producers. But you don't necessarily have this luxury, unless you have someone else to hit 'record' for you.

    I have a similar setup, only I'm using a PowerBook; however, my roommate's PC is the loudest thing in the world, and we had to figure this problem out, since we both record in the living room.

    So here's a few tips:

    1) Don't even bother trying to use room mikes in the same room with the G5. You might as well just mike the G5 itself. If you need to do room miking, you're gonna need to haul the G5 out of the room and get somebody else to engineer. Period.

    2) If you're doing vocal takes, try not to use bi-directional mikes -- stick with your basic Shure-style unidirectional. Keep the G5 out of the line of audio -- you want it > 180 degrees from where the mike is pointing, i.e. you.

    3) Put it under the desk. Even better, go down to Wal-Mart and pick up some of that mattress padding foam cheap. Put the G5 under the desk and Velcro the padding foam around it like a curtain (not too close, obviously, as you need air flow). You'll find that the noise won't entirely disappear...but it'll be close enough for government work.

    As long as you're flying solo, you're never going to get a silent room to work in. But that's okay -- I do pretty well with my setup, and line noise isn't really a problem.

    Hope that helps.

    Josh Ellis
    Creative Lead
    Mperia.com
    • you don't necessarily have this luxury, unless you have someone else to hit 'record' for you.

      My friend uses his bluetooth phone for that very purpose, so he can start recording while being sat behind the drumkit. On apples site bluetooth adds $50 to the price, not too sure about 3rd party adapters but they're pretty damn cheap, usb ones seem to be as low as $15. It looked pretty easy to set it up to control the mouse pointer in OSX.

      Of course that's assuming you can get bluetooth phones fairly easily, her
  • Apple has had a policy at least since November to address the issue by replacing the supply upon request [insanely-great.com]. When I got my G4 fan replaced it was a simple drop-in replacement. I donated the old power supply to the local computer recycler Free Geek.
  • If you're recording, why not really try to separate the vocals from anything else you're doing. I think someone on here mentioned using the shower for your vocals, but build a small partition out of plexi, like one of those sound shields in Musicians' Friend. Get a mike cord long enough to reach your mixer and you should be set.
  • by pbox ( 146337 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @03:19PM (#8432330) Homepage Journal
    1. Active Noise Cancelling

    Stick a microphone close to the source of the noise. Substract [*] this from you voice mic.

    [*] Non-trivial substraction, as it needs scaling, possibly frequency-dependent. However the goal is not elimination, but rather reduction, so You can just use some sound editor's correlation coefficient, and ignor the frequency dependeny.

    2. 5V (7V) etc your fans. This likely to A) void warranty B) reduce the life of you system (but it will be obsolete before that anyway). See Zalman fanmate for an off-the shelp component to solve this.

    3. Move your computer to a separate room. A cabinet would not do, since the cooling relies on the availablity of fresh air. A closed space will heat up, regardless of size. The size only controls the speed of warming up...

    4. Get a PC. I know you hate me know, but there are some really well designed PC cases that can muffle a 3.6 GHz P4. (See Zalman for a completely fanless P4 case. $4K !)

    5. Get a Cube for terminal and use athe G5 as server off-room.

    6. Use mufflers. Ie. boxes that allow air through, but have a maze-like interior with sound-dampening coating. Place G5 inside one of these, and air goes in, but noise doesn't come out (as much).
    • WRT #1, it's also non-trivial because of latency. The time when the sound arrives at the computer's mic will not match the time when it arrives at the other mic. If this mic is hand-held or mounted to an instrument (contact mics notwithstanding), this problem becomes even worse, as you now have a moving latency target.

      This sort of trick works well for LF energy (60Hz wavelength is 18 feet). At the top of the potentially audible range, though, 20 kHz has a wavelength of a little over half an inch. That

  • I'm pretty ignorant on this subject, but could you just cool the entire room? (Less heat, use A/C, whatever.) Lowering the ambient temp will certainly allow the system to shed heat more efficiently, which should mean less fan use.

    Hey, during winter this solution might even save you money!
  • one solution (Score:3, Informative)

    by mzs ( 595629 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @03:34PM (#8432538)
    There was a guy I knew, he did not use macs so I do not know how much this applies, but he had a studio that he set-up when he was in California. From what I saw and what he explained to me, it was set-up where all the analog instruments, mixers, mics, etc fed into boxes that sent digitized signals to a computer that was on the other side of a wall. The boxes sent the digitized audio over usb and optical connections. The reason for this set-up was because the computer was loud, and with it being in another room, the mics would not pick it up in the studio. With essentially a hole in the wall, he fed his mouse, keyboard, and monitor cable to the other room on the other side of the wall. He also used the special boxes (I do not remember what company made them) to digitize and send the audio that way to the computer, because he learned that using a board in the computer itself was a bad idea because of all the electrical (hissing and pops) noise that crept in. He noted that the optical connection was the best because there was no possible way for electrical noise to interfere.

    I wish I could remember more details, I am not a musician. I thought that this might help though. I am a computer professional and it is probably a bad idea to put things like speaker dampening material in/around your case like others seem to have suggested. You really do not want to interfere with the cooling system for of computer unless you do not want it last long.
  • ... if I needed to get rid of fan noise, what I've planned on trying is piping in air from a relatively far removed vibrational air pump -- an aquarium pump -- and shut off the internal fan. It could be in its own enclosure if need be. Some of them have a pretty fair output. Using rubber hose instead of plastic would help damp any vibration coming up the hose. Another hack that might not be suitable for everyday use, but could be used for those sessions where silence is necessary, if the pump helps but isn'
  • by metrazol ( 142037 ) <jwm33@corne[ ]edu ['ll.' in gap]> on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:05PM (#8432903)
    It's the mBox.

    Yeah, you heard me. The mBox. The inputs on those pieces of crap are so noisy you have to use a separate pre-amp if you want any kind of range. Seriously, I own one, THEY SUCK.

    Now, enough trolling about the mBox, that horrible horrible toy. Tinkering around inside the G5 is a phenomenally bad idea. But there are many products that let you quiet a machine w/o oh, melting it. I can't find a link, but there're a number of thin (4mm) foam materials you can put on the inside of your case walls that have great sound dampening ability. Now, the fans are the tougher problem. I'd recommend the venting idea proposed in another post. All external, all cheap.

    One last note: To save the recordings you have made, try out Sony/Sonic Foundry's Noise Reduction plug in. I've used it to remove the machine noise from my DAW and it's really, really good, especially for voice. Now, yes, it's on a PC, but it'll run FAST on any relatively new (P3 or better, Athlon) desktop.

    But dump the mBox if you want to be taken seriously. I can't stand the damn thing, but it wasn't my purchasing decision...
  • Studio Tricks (Score:4, Informative)

    by trianglecat ( 318478 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:14PM (#8433010)
    First: I recognise that its a real pain to be away from the computer while trying to do any sort of tracks. You end up going back and forth. Truth be told, this is the best solution though. Try setting small section "punch ins" so that you can keep at a section until your happy and move the mic to a different room. Use of omni directional mics will also help.

    Second. Baffles are cheap and they work great. Any good studio will have lots of free standing cubicle walls hanging around. You can pick these up for a song at any used office store. Then, either box in your CPU or your mic. The more baffles, the quieter the sound.
  • by SnowDog74 ( 745848 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:41PM (#8433268)
    BANDPASS FILTER

    Yes, that's right, children... any LF or HF hum can be squeezed out with a bandpass filter. ProTools has em, so does Final Cut Pro. So use it.

    So, we've got four viable steps, none of which include screwing with the heat management of the G5:

    1. Bandpass filter - the ultimate weapon. A combination of low-pass and high-pass filters with the right tweaking will narrow the frequency range right down to the envelope you need. Combined with limiters, compressors and other standard ProTools post-production weaponry, you can make even Britney Spears' asinine voice sound bearable (if it weren't already so obviously post-processed to hell).

    2. Mic placement - If you need to be near your monitor but not near your box, get an extension cable for the monitor and keep the box as far away from the mic as possible.

    3. Dead room - an acoustically-padded portable chamber for recording vocals... you can get these but they are quite expensive. If cost is a factor, try the cheaper solutions first.

    4. Unidirectional mic - In other words, don't use a Shure SM58 or some such omnidirectional piece of crap. Get a good unidirectional mic and place its head diametrically opposed to the direction from which the fan noise is coming.

  • My suggestions (Score:3, Informative)

    by cpct0 ( 558171 ) <slashdot.micheldonais@com> on Monday March 01, 2004 @04:52PM (#8433397) Homepage Journal
    - don't mess around the internals.
    - you can remove the hard disks and actually put them over a network (gigabit recommended) line using a Apple Server and a NetBoot
    - you can remove the hard disks by using a 15ft firewire cable or a very long and very expensive fiber channel cable
    - you don't need much speed unless you are using active plugins. If you only do recording, consider doing the record and then applying the plugins
    - you can cancel-out some noise using Spark XL 2.8 sound recording software (by TC Works). There is a VST plug-in called DeNoise where you give it a sample up to 3 seconds of your noise (and ONLY your noise, as recorded... for example, just before or after your official recording session) and it will remove it. It's of very decent quality.
    - I suggest you do not put your G5 under your desk, as it will simply make the air hot all around... and the fans will kick-off more often. Instead, put it some place where it will get a lot of air. You can put noise cancelling panels between it and your mic though.
    - Use some third party sound input hardware (like firewire devices) They are better isolated than your computer's sound input (even if it is really excellent).
    - If you have to change your equipment (microphones) for your recording gear, consider alternatives ... like putting your computer in another room.

    Mike
    • "- If you have to change your equipment (microphones) for your recording gear, consider alternatives ... like putting your computer in another room."

      Did you read the question? He said he couldn't move the computer.
      • Don't want to start a flamewar here.

        I read the question. Have you read my answers? All of them are to the point ... and I like the last one...

        "consider alternatives ... _like_"
        - DAT recording
        - CD recorder
        - Having a external USB box or something to grab sound off
        - Taking a LC III to record at 44.1KHz and write the file to network
        - Renting a Nagra-D
        - NOT using the G5 because it has not enough surface to remove heat.
        AND putting your computer in another room.

        For convenience, maybe the guy doesn't want to mov
        • Did you consider the scenario in which you only have a single room, such as a studio apartment?

          BTW- I'm not being rude, just terse. I thought your other suggestions were helpful.
  • by Upright Joe ( 658035 ) <<uprightjoe> <at> <gmail.com>> on Monday March 01, 2004 @05:02PM (#8433504) Homepage
    I am currently recording some vocal overdubs in a small room with a dual G4 in it. Here is my advice if you can't move the machine to a second room:

    1) Position the mic so that the maximum angle of rejection faces the computer (180 degrees for cardioid patterns, 90 degrees for figure 8, etc).
    2) Dampen the walls of the room with auralex, blankets, mattress foam, whatnot.
    3) Gate the vocals when mixing down.

    If you're close mic'ing the vocals, fan noise shouldn't be a big issue. It's really when you want to start using distant mics that it becomes a pain. Obviously omnidirectional mics will also tend to be more problematic.

    Another thing I do sometimes if I want to record an extremely quiet audio source is fire up VNC on my laptop and run mic cables into the next room. My laptop is dead silent under normal operating conditions so it makes a great remote control for my desktop.
  • Minimizing CPU usage (Score:2, Informative)

    by NSObject ( 250170 )
    Unless your sequencer pegs the cpu at 100% just iding away, and if you're a one man show laying down one track at a time, try this:

    Bounce your tracks down to a single two channel mix for overdubbing, then mute all the others. Record the output of any software samplers to these tracks and mix in effects and eq so you won't have to tax the cpu with them during playback.

    I use Digital Performer. It has pretty low cpu requirements, except, oddly, for the time counter. I move the fractional beats part of the co
  • What type of mic are you using? I'm presently using a PC while I'm waiting for G5 updates and it's pretty loud, however I can get away with vocal work using the method below; The G5 is very loud when all the fans kick in, but I'm surprised that recording a VO is causing your CPU utilisation to go high enough to set them off.

    If you were using a phantom powered condenser mic with the low cut off switched on, and speaking directly with your mouth touching the pop shield at the end of a 20' cable with the co
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 01, 2004 @07:20PM (#8434771)
    http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/G5/G5_noise_tips.html
  • How hard is it? (Score:3, Informative)

    by djupedal ( 584558 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @07:26PM (#8434822)
    Go into System Prefs/Energy Saver and set the processor(s) for low performance.
  • by parr ( 61445 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @07:59PM (#8435101)
    Apple Computer sells the XtremeMac Xrack Pro 12U Enclosed Rack to solve the sound problem, be functional and look nice in the process.

    It offers many nice features,
    Acoustically engineered to reduce server noise by 75%,
    Heavy Duty Casters for complete portability ,
    Engineered for positive airflow ,
    Ideal for Audio/Video creative environments ,
    Integrated cable management system ,
    Built-in 6-outlet power distribution ,
    Platinum finish, etc....

    While designed for a 21" tall stack of loud Xservers, The PowerMac G5 is only 20.1" tall. It seems to have everything one could want, except possibly a low price.

    Apple Computer has an exclusive on this. It is listed under Server Accessories at the Apple Store for only $1799.00
    • We have one of these at work and can say that this enclosure is MUCH louder than the G5. Don't waste your money.

      Move the mic, set up a baffle (a "playpen" made of blankets for your mac), and ditch the mbox. That should do it.

  • by YouHaveSnail ( 202852 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @08:16PM (#8435258)
    1. Make sure the case is properly closed, with the clear plastic air deflector in place.

    2. Turn down the thermostat in the studio a bit.

    The G5 tower is normally extremely quiet as fan-cooled computers go, and if you hear the fans spinning up it means that the processor(s) is(are) running abnormally hot. The machine is designed to draw air in through the entire front, push it though a restriction near the processor(s), and exhaust it through the entire back. The restriction causes the air to speed up momentarily, and the net result is that you get a lot of air moving over the processor(s) quickly, but entering and leaving the machine fairly slowly, which keeps the noise down.

    If the clear air deflector inside the case is removed, then there's less of a restriction to direct and accelerate the air, and that would be a problem. And when the case door is opened while the machine is on, the fans speed up immediately for similar reasons. So check that you've got that deflector installed, and that the door is closed properly.

    If the air in your studio is a little on the warm side (perhaps the studio is in your attic?), then it obviously won't cool the machine very effectively. Run an air conditioner, open the window, or turn down the thermostat for a few hours before recording to cool down the air in there.
  • Too noisy? Just open up the case and snip the wires going to the fans -- no more noise. The hard drive might still make some noise, so cover the whole case with several layers of quilts -- this will also aid in thermal conservation.

    This will work for maybe a minute or two before the computer overheats and permamently dies. But hey -- for that couple of minutes -- man is it quiet.
  • I've been fighting using up mod points on this thread and now that I'm posting, I can't use them which is probably a good thing right now. =-)

    The solution here is very simple. You need to isolate the noise coming from the computer. As many people have suggested, keeping everything in different rooms is ideal. That's why "real" recording studios have a control room, a record booth, and a machine room. Since this is not possible in this situation, make it possible with a little sideways thinking.

    We k

  • by solios ( 53048 ) on Tuesday March 02, 2004 @01:47PM (#8442165) Homepage
    Our G5s whirred like guinea pigs fornicating while under the influence of copious amounts of amphetamines.

    Then we installed the firmware update.

    Now they make about as much noise as a slug on ketamine.

    Simple solution, really.
  • unless you have a soundproof booth!
  • You can replace the fan screws of your G5 fans by anti-vib fan fasteners.

    The article is in French:
    http://www.macbidouille.com/niouzcontenu. php?date= 2004-02-18#7900

    However the PDF is in English + pictures:
    http://www.macbidouille.com/downloads/G 5_PSU_Denoi ser.pdf.sit

    Enjoy.
  • Sound Construction and Supply make a little box that is supposed to muffle all sound produced by a powermac, called the "isomac". I own one of their IsoBoxes, and I can tell you that it definitely works. Their website is: http://www.custom-consoles.com/ If, by chance anyone out there wants to buy a 16-space ISOBOX, mine's for sale and in great condition, I just don't need it anymore. e-mail me if you're interested.
  • by azav ( 469988 )
    Buy a used g4 cube without a fan for recording.
    Turn the g5 off when recording.
  • You have a lot of choices for cooling, some elaborate, some not.

    Anyone who really isn't interested in making a sound-damper box shouldn't bother reading the whole post; it's not that long but it's going to go over a bit too much to display in Slashdot's window.

    This has worked for me. It's reasonably inexpensive and reasonably effective.

    It all starts with a box; you may as well make is some kind of road case; it's not particularly more expensive to do so. Whatever, it's up to you.

    Make the box reasonably
  • Did you splurge and get the Radeon 9800 Pro video card? If so, that's the problem ... the thing comes with a rather noisy fan.

    If you need a quiet G5, buy one with a Radeon 9600 Pro.

    The case fans and CPU fans are pretty quiet unless the machine heats up too much (or you remove the plastic panel).

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