Fan very loud in Ubuntu 12.10
Solution 1
I had this after installation, but it went back to normal after doing a re-boot. That was 3 days ago and it has been ok since then.
Solution 2
I have a similar problem in Xubuntu 11.10 which has developed excessive fan noise in the last few months. Looking at the processes tab in Sys monitor, Firefox does appear to be using a lot of CPU % when doing things like switching/opening tabs, even scrolling with 3 tabs open uses 20%
For me it has only occured in the last few months, previous to that it was fine so maybe it is related to Firefox specifically?
Asus G71V Core 2 Duo T9400 @ 2.53GHz, 4GB Ram, Geforce 9600M
Solution 3
I had the same problem. I'm not sure if this is still a problem in the kernel 3+, but my fan behaves now more or less as under Windows 7. I followed the advice for a fix here (webupd8.org).
Solution 4
you should consider installing jupiter, since this fixed my blazing fans.
you can select power modes with it, and it's very easy to control.
I always install this on my laptops, and set it to power on demand(personal opinion).
open terminal and do this.
add the repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/jupiter
update
sudo apt-get update
install jupiter
sudo apt-get install jupiter
and to other people reading this and are using an Asus EEPC netbook, install this asswell
sudo apt-get install jupiter-support-eee
Have a nice day :)
Solution 5
You might try to determine which fan is having the problem.
I have a Dell Dimension 9200 with an NVidia graphics card (GeForce 7900 GS) and was having the same issue. It turned out, it was the graphics card fan that was the underlying noise maker. I was able to fix this by using the proprietary NVidia driver instead of the Nouveau driver.
I changed using the Software Center: 1) Open Software Center 2) Select Edit | Software Sources 3) Select the Additional Drivers tab 4) Choose Using NVIDIA binary Xorg driver, kernel module and VDPAU library from nvidia-304-updates (proprietary) 5) Press the Apply Changes button 6) Quit the dialog, reboot, and viola, no more fan noise.
I used the instructions found here as my guide for changing the drivers.
Related videos on Youtube
jgallant
I am a professional programmer. I enjoy making games. I have open sourced Projects available on my Github. I have written various Articles. And I also released some Games.
Updated on September 18, 2022Comments
-
jgallant over 1 year
I recently installed 12.10 on my Desktop PC, moving away from Windows 7. For some reason, the fan in my computer is making an enormous amount of noise (it is running at full speed constantly).
Under Windows 7, the fan would slow itself down and run at an acceptable noise level. Now, it is nearly unbearable.
Checked the processes, and none are taking up a huge load on the CPU.
Please help as I really can't endure this noise, and I do not want to go back to Windows 7 on this box.
Some specs: - Intel 2.26 duo core - ATI 4870 - 4GB - 650W power supply
-
Admin over 11 yearsI have the same problem with Ubuntu 12.10 dual boot with windows 8 I can't use it like this Dell XPS8300 Computer is making an enormous amount of noise (it is running at full speed constantly). Ubuntu 12.04 was working fine Any idea?
-
Admin over 11 yearsI'm not convinced this is a duplicate. The answers are possibly suggesting a divergent cause, anyway.
-
Admin over 11 yearsI've tried everything. The best solution was to install the AMD proprietary drivers. Seems to calm the fan down significantly, however, at the sacrifice of 2D acceleration. The AMD drivers are ridiculously horrible for 2D applications.
-
Admin almost 10 yearsI forgot about this thread. Just wanted to say that Ubuntu ended up killing my GPU fan, and I got a new video card, and the problem was fine after that. It must of been some driver issue with my particular video card.
-
-
Oli over 11 yearsSo now I am on Xubuntu 12.10, 3.5.0-18-generic. Is this the kernel overheating issue? #sesnors gives
code
acpitz-virtual-0 Adapter: Virtual device temp1: +50.0°C (crit = +110.0°C) coretemp-isa-0000 Adapter: ISA adapter Core 0: +46.0°C (high = +105.0°C, crit = +105.0°C) Core 1: +47.0°C (high = +105.0°C, crit = +105.0°C)code