Problem with high pitch noises
Information on strange high pitch, low volume noises emitted by ThinkPads.
Contents
Problem description
Even though ThinkPads are known as very silent notebooks, they tend to emit different, mostly high pitch noises in certain circumstances. The noises are of low volume and hence not realized by everyone or at least tolerated by most people. However, there are those with "bat like ears" that hear them and might be annoyed by that.
Affected Models
Noises have been experienced in the following situations:
situation | noise description | affected models |
---|---|---|
Plugged into AC / running at high CPU frequency |
soft crackling, buzzing noise |
|
ThinkPad suspended to RAM |
constant high pitch noise |
|
ThinkPad connected to power and switched off, with battery fully charged |
constant high pitch noise |
|
moving windows or just the mouse in xorg |
strange noise like a rapid series of very short high pitch noises adding to a constant kind of whistling (only as long as the movement goes) |
|
Thinkpad connected to power or working on battery, also when suspended to RAM |
High pitch noise also when HD is powered down. |
|
Thinkpad connected to power battery charged less than 60% |
High pitch noise till battery is charged more than 60%. |
|
Constantly, if AC connected |
High pitched, low volume constant noise. |
|
When the CPU freq jumps up to 1Ghz or above, or when the laptop is in suspend mode |
Constant high pitched |
|
(May come from harddisk.) |
continuous, intermittent, low volume, high pitched |
|
ACPI puts the processor into the C3 or C4 power saving states (i.e., the system is idle). |
High-pitched crackling noise. |
|
Cpufreqd (or powernowd etc.) slows down the processor, for exemple at the end of an heavy task. |
High-pitched crackling noise. |
|
When on battery |
Almost inaudible screeching sound, or sometimes beeping (when wifi is on) |
|
CPU is used much AND laptop is on AC power AND the TFT panel is enabled. | Screetching high pitch noise, like a million crickets |
Affected Operating Systems
All, though Linux appears especially susceptible.
Possible sources
- CPU activity: On some models the noise is triggered by certain CPU power states or activity patterns (as proven here).
- Graphics processor: In some models from the T2x era, e.g. the T23, the problem was related to the graphics circuitry and occured especially or only while making use of DirectDraw functions. IBM was able to fix it through a BIOS upgrade.
- Hard disk: On some ThinkPads the processor and hard disk are adjacent and produce similar noise. For example, in the X41 the sound generated by the hard disk is likely to be loudest at the vent.
Status
The problem is highly specific to operating system, model and even individual machines. There is no universal solution, but on most machines one of the following will reduce or eliminate the noise (possibly at some cost in power consumption).
Solutions for CPU-triggered noise
Limit ACPI CPU power states
There are four ACPI CPU power states, called C1 through C4. Often only the extreme power saving modes C4 or C3 produce the noise, so we the noise can be stopped by insructing the Linux ACPI code to use only lower modes.
To forbid the ACPI driver from using C4 (this fixed the problem with on some ThinkPad T43, T43p and T41):
- If the ACPI processor component is compiled as built-in (CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR=y):
- Pass the
max_cstate=3
kernel argument.
- Pass the
- If the ACPI processor component is loaded as a module (CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR=m and processor shows in the output of
# lsmod
), do either of:- Pass the
processor.max_cstate=3
kernel argument (this does not work in Ubuntu 5.10 with default kernel). - Add
options processor max_cstate=3
to /etc/modprobe.conf (or /etc/modprobe.conf.local, or /etc/modprobe.d/..., depending on your system) (this does not work in Ubuntu 5.10 with default kernel). # echo 3 > /sys/module/processor/parameters/max_cstate
(this can be changed in runtime for experimentation). (If may need to be set again upon resume from suspend, e.g., in the wakeup script.)- (On Ubuntu 5.10, the default kernel uses
processor
as a module. Unfortunately, the script loading it, /etc/init.d/acpid, ignores theoptions processor max_cstate=3
setting in /etc/modprobe.d/<my file>. As a solution for this specific problem, add the lineecho 2 > /sys/module/processor/parameters/max_cstate
directly to /etc/init.d/acpid, at the end of the functionload_modules()
, immediately after the lineecho "$PRINTK" > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
.)
- Pass the
To also forbid the C3 state, replace "3" with "2" above (this fixed the problem on some ThinkPad X40, X41, and R52):
Note that these options affect power consumption when the CPU is idle. For example, here are the power consumption figures on a ThinkPad T43:
processor.max_cstate=4
: 15160mW (default, noisy)processor.max_cstate=3
: 15770mW (660mW higher, silent)processor.max_cstate=2
: 16100mW (2940mW higher, silent)
See the discussion page for further information and success reports.
- Jakob Schou Pedersen: Editing the file /etc/init.d/acpid as described above (the last solution) worked on my T43 :-)
Turn off CPU power saving in in BIOS
Go into the BIOS and turn off the power saving processor feature that puts it into idle mode. (This worked on a ThinkPad T43.)
Disable ACPI CPU power states
Completely disable CPU ACPI power states. Discussion:
- From Martin Steigerwald: I made the observation that I get at least less high pitch noises on my T23 when I do not use the two ACPI modules "processor" and "thermal" (depends on the first one). I have no clue, why. Anyone with similar experiences?
- Omar Yasin: I've got a R52 and when I load the same ACPIO modules the high pitch noises are not as loud but I can still hear them.
- Niko Ehrenfeuchter: I'm experiencing the same here on my X24. Removing the "processor" module also stops the pitch noise, which does ONLY occur when setting the CPU to maximum speed (using cpufreq). On low speed it's completely silent, even having loaded the processor module.
- Rolf Adelsberger: I can confirm this: the high pitch noise is only remarkable (at least with my ears ;-) ) if the processor speed is set to maximum frequency.
- Stefan Baums: My X41 produced a high-pitched crackle from the processor vent on the left. Changing HZ did nothing, and the 'processor' module could not easily be removed from the system (Ubuntu 5.04). What solved the problem for me was adding
idle=halt
to the boot command line. Unfortunately, this solution only lasts until the first hibernation or suspend - when the computer (X41) resumes, the high-pitched crackle is back.
- The
idle=halt
solution combined with setting#define HZ 100
in the kernel fixes the problem on a T43.
- jhatch:
idle=halt
plus#define HZ 100
also worked on my T43. It still reverts back to noisy after a suspend/resume though. This needs to be fixed...
Change the timer interrupt frequency
Change the "HZ" kernel constants to alter the frequency of timer interrupts. Discussion:
- Andreas Karnahl: i've read in several forums it has something to do with the "idle"-state (or "C3") of the processor. There is a frequency called "timer interrupt" (or so mething like that). Since kernel 2.6x it is set to 1000 Hz by default (compared to 100 Hz in Kernel 2.4x). The exact reason i don't know, but it is safe to change this frequency to 100 Hz in kernel 2.6x (by the way, windows up to XP uses 100 Hz by default).
Just do the following:
- In [path to kernel-sources]/include/asm-i386/param.h find the line
#define HZ 1000
- and change the value of HZ to 100:
#define HZ 100
- Then recompile the kernel.
After i changed it on my ThinkPad A30 (under SuSE 9.2 and 9.3) and recompiling the kernel the high pitch noise is gone away.
- Omar Yasin: Worked on my R52, thanks.
- Thinker: In modern kernels this constant is in the kernel configuration (Processor type and features -> Timer frequency).
Prevent idling
Indirectly avoid power saving states by making sure the CPU is rarely idle:
- Paul RIVIER: Here is a really simple workaround. C3 / C4 states are mainly called when the cpu freq is higher than required, for example if your cpufreqd is lazy to slow down the frequency but quick to raise it. That is why I use powernowd with the builtin "passive" mode, which is lazy for raising frequency, but quick to go back to the lowest. Now I don't hear them as often as before, as I avoid C3/C4 states at high frequency.
- The problem also occurs on my X41 with 2.6.11. Setting up frequency scaling with the
ondemand
governor makes things a lot better, as the processor does not stay with the maximum frequency when in idle mode. It can be still heard sometimes, though.
- On a T43 the noise was gone after dropping cpufreqd and switching to the ondemand governor - maybe because of the high sampling rate? (used the default: 10ms)
Change the processor voltage
Reducing the processor voltage (when possible) may decrease or eliminate the noise. On one ThinkPad T43, undervolting the Pentium M processor eliminated the high-pitched noise. Compared to the other solutions this has the benefit of lower power consumption, both due to the undervolting itself and because there is no need to forbid high APCI CPU power saving modes.
Other solutions
Disable UltraBay
- Naheed Vora: My T41 (2373-268) started to give high pitch noise ocassionally, when I upgraded to 2.6.11 kernel. I tried to unload lot of modules but finally figured out that disabling bay stops the noise. If you have ibm-acpi, do (need a cleaner solution):
$ echo eject >/proc/acpi/ibm/bay
.
Disable IrDA
- Mike Perry: I was able to cure an intermittent high-pitched whine on both my X24 and X40 by disabling the Infrared port.
Disable the Linuxant Modem Driver
- Joern Heissler: I made another experience. I played around with linuxant conexant modem drivers. After loading them I got some noise on my T42p.