Why are MacPro's so quiet?

One of the most pleaseant surprises of transition from PC to MacPro is in my working conditions. My office is now so heavenly quiet ☺.
Why? Is it isolation? Special cooling system?

MacPro, Mac OS X (10.5.6)

Posted on Feb 14, 2009 10:24 PM

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6 replies

Feb 15, 2009 12:48 AM in response to M2M.si

They use large heatsinks on the CPUs and memory so they don't need fast airflow for cooling, and they use large fans turning at low speeds to move the air. The case has lots of holes on the front and back, and little obstruction to the air flow inside, so the airflow doesn't make a lot of noise. I have mine on a desk in front of a window, and can see straight through the case to the window. There are many temperature sensors inside, so the fans can be run just fast enough to keep everything at a safe temperature.

Apple started paying a lot of attention to airflow, starting with the G5 models, after the last G4s got the nickname Wind Tunnel.

Feb 17, 2009 11:56 AM in response to M2M.si

Malcolm covered many of the design decisions; Apple went pretty deep with the thought process. For example, why do you have to get RAM with special heat sinks? Because Apple decided that if you could get the RAM to throw off heat more efficiently, the fans would not have to work as hard, meaning they could be quieter.

When the current case design was first released several years ago, Apple had videos and other material explaining all of the little things they did to optimize cooling and airflow in a way that would allow the use of quiet, low-speed fans.

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Why are MacPro's so quiet?

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