Weird Noises
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calloftheblade
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 6:03 pm
Weird Noises
Does anyone experience grinding/whining noises when they scroll, or minimize/maximize windows...? thanks
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sharpc8690
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 8:15 pm
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calloftheblade
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 6:03 pm
My T41p makes funny noises while it is supplied from the outlet. The noices seems to originate from the lower lefthand side of the palmrest. The noise goes away when I remove the power (and run on batteries).
Could it have someting to do with the clock speed of the processor?
Anyway, I have experienced this on other ThinkPads as well - e.g. the T30.
JASE
Could it have someting to do with the clock speed of the processor?
Anyway, I have experienced this on other ThinkPads as well - e.g. the T30.
JASE
JASE wrote:My T41p makes funny noises while it is supplied from the outlet. The noices seems to originate from the lower lefthand side of the palmrest. The noise goes away when I remove the power (and run on batteries).
Could it have someting to do with the clock speed of the processor?
Anyway, I have experienced this on other ThinkPads as well - e.g. the T30.
JASE
we have exactly the same problem... i have a T41 2373-3HA. i have some colleagues using a T40 but they don't seem to experience these weird noises plugged on AC or un-plugged.. when opening programs... etc
obviously my TP is faster than their TP's you might have a point that it has something to do with the processor speed..
oh... and my T41 is hotter that the T40's....
Uhhhh ... I don't know of any reason a capacitor would make audible noise - especially the size capacitors that would be in your TP ... unless, of course, they explode - then they kind of make a popping sound ...dimme wrote:Calloftheblade
I have a T41 and I experience the same grinding noises when scrolling. I was told by IBM and the university helpdesk that it is caused by some capacitors inside and nothing to worry about.
There may be some wierd sort of resonance happening, but I seriously doubt that would result in audible grinding frequencies.
I might believe, however, that noise from the power supply, hard drive, etc. sometimes works its way into the speaker signal, but capacitance would probably tend to reduce this effect, not enhance it ...
I'm puzzled
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BillMorrow
- *Senior* Admin

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capacitors..??!!
BS, pure and simple, common ordinary, industrial grade BS..!!
when this happens again, do a reboot..
i have experienced this when a system is about to crash..
on desktype boxes and thinkpads and servers..
corrupt video driver..??
or bad mouse driver..??
not sure..
but it is 99% software..
capacitors..???! what a load..
when this happens again, do a reboot..
i have experienced this when a system is about to crash..
on desktype boxes and thinkpads and servers..
corrupt video driver..??
or bad mouse driver..??
not sure..
but it is 99% software..
capacitors..???! what a load..
Bill Morrow, kept by parrots
& cockatoos
Sysop - forum.thinkpads.com
*
She was not what you would call refined,
She was not what you would call unrefined,
She was the type of person who kept a parrot.
~~~Mark Twain~~~
Sysop - forum.thinkpads.com
*
She was not what you would call refined,
She was not what you would call unrefined,
She was the type of person who kept a parrot.
~~~Mark Twain~~~
Yes, it happens from time to time. Nothing to worry about.
To make some of you feel better (and to tell the truth), the same thing happens on other brand of laptops as well, such as Sony's VAIOs, Toshiba's Sats...It's not just Thinkpads. Don't worry, your computer isn't going to crash and burn anytime soon.
To make some of you feel better (and to tell the truth), the same thing happens on other brand of laptops as well, such as Sony's VAIOs, Toshiba's Sats...It's not just Thinkpads. Don't worry, your computer isn't going to crash and burn anytime soon.
Sorry to dig up an old thread on this great forum, but capacitors can really make the funniest noises I can tell you from 15+ years in electronics. Especially high frequency and amplifier (=high current) capacitors. The latter can be really loud, like smashing a big spring (metallic sound) on every beat of the music. Those are all electrolytic capacitors that dry up troughout time. Only replacing them is a solution, since glueing them to all fixed things around it will not permanently work.gte204i wrote: Uhhhh ... I don't know of any reason a capacitor would make audible noise - especially the size capacitors that would be in your TP ... unless, of course, they explode - then they kind of make a popping sound ...
I've read a lot about this high pitch noise, since I am blessed with a superb hearing and having a TP 570 with the same issue.
Another cause I've read is the coils in the video circuit start getting loose. Glueing them was proposed as solution, but I have not yet got around to doing that. It seems Toshiba's Satellite series is suffering a lot from this, and indeed, my wife's Tosh has it too. Which of course is no match for our TP's...
Second is the high pitch noise when the AC adapter is plugged in.. Haven't quite figured out what causes this...
I'll keep searching this forum (compliments on the excellent knowledge!), until then I wouldn't mind getting some links to these issues
R,
I wish there was a serious successor to the TP570..
My guess would be some sort of oscillator circuit or switching supply operating at high frequencies.thuur wrote:Second is the high pitch noise when the AC adapter is plugged in.. Haven't quite figured out what causes this...
T42(p) 2379-DXU | 15" FlexView, 2.0 GHz, 2 GB, 128 MB FireGL T2 mobo, UJ-842 Multi-Burner, 100 GB 7200 RPM, Dock II
T410 2516-CTO | 2.66 GHz i7-620M, 6 GB, 512 MB NVIDIA 3100m, 160 GB SSD
T410 2516-CTO | 2.66 GHz i7-620M, 6 GB, 512 MB NVIDIA 3100m, 160 GB SSD
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