Though quiet at idle, our benchmarks revealed the system fan can emit up to 47
decibels at load.
Not exact matches
At load, the Falcon puts out 44.2
decibels, which is four less than the Aventum 3.
At idle it didn't register above ambient noise, and it only pegged at 44.1 decibels at full load, which is an extremely low resul
At idle it didn't register above ambient noise, and it only pegged
at 44.1 decibels at full load, which is an extremely low resul
at 44.1
decibels at full load, which is an extremely low resul
at full
load, which is an extremely low result.
At idle it hums along at a pleasant 34.8 decibels, but at load it hits 42.3 dB, which is very noticeabl
At idle it hums along
at a pleasant 34.8 decibels, but at load it hits 42.3 dB, which is very noticeabl
at a pleasant 34.8
decibels, but
at load it hits 42.3 dB, which is very noticeabl
at load it hits 42.3 dB, which is very noticeable.
The Toshiba Satellite Radius is seven
decibels louder
at load!
Our maximum reading of 43.1
decibels at full
load only proved the point.
We noted during sound testing that the system registered a maximum of 45.9
decibels at full
load — which is lower than average.
In our testing, the Lenovo Ideacentre Y900 produced only 38.9
decibels at idle, and a mere 42.7
decibels at full
load.
These relatively low temperatures were managed by an aggressive fan that produced only 39.2
decibels at idle, but spun up to a roaring 52.5 dB
at load.
We registered a reading of 40.2
decibels at idle, which increased to a maximum of 43.6
decibels at full
load.
Our
decibel meter recorded a pleasant result of 40.3 dB
at idle, and that number jumped to just 46dB
at load.
At full
load the Thallium put out 46.2
decibels, compared to 39.6 from the Origin Millennium.
It idled
at about 37
decibels and reached a peak of 45dB
at heavy
load.
At idle, the Satellite Radius P55W produces 40.7 decibels of fan noise, which rises to 46.3 dB at loa
At idle, the Satellite Radius P55W produces 40.7
decibels of fan noise, which rises to 46.3 dB
at loa
at load.