

(they might decrease just a tad, but not much) Then after I close everything down for half an hour, the fans are still raging on. Once I've loaded something heavy up like a big project or a demanding game, the fans are mad. (I realise MAX-Q is on the GPU, but both fans sound as loud as the other).Įven when doing something daft like loading up my good old favourite cat vids. MAX-Q is supposed to 'stop your fans going above 40db!!' well right now it feels like it's at 400db, Hit 8 million RPM by time I landed in the game. The fan noise gradually climbed as I went into the lobby.

Started up Fortnite, not the most demanding game in the world.

(was quite shocked with how bad it was since I only got it in December).īooted up, ran HWiNFO, got 45-50☌ avg on my 4 CPU cores. Let's get to it though, I've just cleaned out the dust from my fans Post production vocal mixing can't take away what sounds like a millennium falcon landing,Īt least without ruining the dynamics of the vocals anyway. Then finally be able to record with a quiet room. I produce music most of the day, I also record vocals via a condenser mic > audio interface.īut right now the only way I can record vocals is by turning the laptop off for half an hour,īooting up, turning on nothing but my music production software, I've put up with it since but now it's too much to handle. Straight away it felt like it was breaking the sound barrier. Thought I'd test it out immediately by loading up CS-GO. Ok so I got my Inspiron 7577 at the beginning of December,
