
We all know that the compact and portable nature of laptops comes with a trade-off - a tight space where hardware is stacked on top of each other, accompanied by a large battery integrated into an incredibly small frame. As heat accumulates inside, the cooling fan has to work hard to circulate air and cool the internal hardware.
1. Dealing with a Noisy Laptop Fan
We are well aware that the compact and portable nature of laptops comes at the cost of a cramped space where hardware is stacked on top of each other. Additionally, a large battery is integrated into an extremely small frame. As heat accumulates inside, the cooling fan has to work vigorously to circulate air and cool the internal hardware.
Laptop hardware (such as CPU, RAM, VGA, etc.) operates at higher power, generating more heat. This causes the cooling fan to operate more intensively, eventually producing an annoyingly loud noise. So, what can we do to minimize the noise?

If the fan suddenly spins rapidly without any error or warning displayed on the screen, it may be responding to the cooling needs of some hardware, typically the GPU. The best approach to address this issue is to close unwanted applications using that hardware by ending the processes. On Mac, check and disable background and unwanted processes using Activity Monitor. For Windows, use Task Manager. Additionally, to prevent these processes from restarting with the computer, Win 10 users need to remove them from the startup folder or Task Manager/startup. For Mac users, go to System Preferences > Users > Startup and eliminate all unnecessary tasks.




