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I've got a HP DL380 and after I leave it on for a while it decides it needs to run the fans at a much higher speed than it did before. It's really loud and annoying. Is there any way to manually control the fan speed? Or otherwise get it to stop doing that? Thanks.

edit: I guess i should have made it clear that this is a bit of a jury-rigged situation. I know the ideal solution is to put the thing in a server room with nice cool air. Unfortunately, that isn't happening. This is the sort of problem that calls for a jury rigged solution like

  • manually setting the fan speed and accepting the fact that it's going to run hot
  • shutting down a CPU (can i do that?)
  • spinning down the disks when they're not in use (is that possible?)

solution: Install HP's system health monitoring daemon, hpasmd. I installed it to try to figure out what was going on, and just running it fixed the problem.

8 Answers 8

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Some rackmount HP machines that I've worked on in the past were known to run their fans at full tilt until a proprietary driver or software package is loaded in the OS. Then they would be relaxed down.

What OS are you using? Have you installed all of the recommended drivers/packages?

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  • i'm running linux. I've installed the "hpasm" tool which runs some sort of system monitoring daemon and lets me check the temperature and fan speed etc. Jul 14, 2009 at 16:23
  • Is there any noticeable difference between the time that the machine is booting and when HPASM is loaded? Have you started HPASM with the command hpasm activate?
    – Dan Carley
    Jul 14, 2009 at 16:26
  • just running hpasmd all the time seems to solve the problem. Mar 17, 2010 at 14:39
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Put it in a cooler room or feed it more cool air. The fans typically ramp up as more cooling is needed. Are you monitoring any of the temp sensors to see how warm it is when it gets loud?

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    If that was an option I would have done it :/ Jul 14, 2009 at 16:04
  • Which? Cool air or temp monitoring? I guess I should've asked, just where is this thing, anyways? Under a desk? In a server room?
    – Chris_K
    Jul 14, 2009 at 16:07
  • > which? Cool air or temp monitoring? Cool air. The temp is 109 in "I/O_ZONE" and 104 in CPU#1. Which is hot but it seems like it wouldn't melt if it was a bit hotter. Jul 14, 2009 at 16:10
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    @smoofra: Then you're going to have to live with the sound. Jul 14, 2009 at 16:11
  • "but it seems like it wouldn't melt if it was a bit hotter." Are you willing to test that theory by disabling or limiting the fan speed? To me, a loud system is better than a broken system. Jul 14, 2009 at 16:17
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Check your CPU usage to make sure some rogue process isn't running the CPU 100% of the time, increasing heat, causing the fans to run full-bore.

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Modern computers often have a self regulating thermal control unit. If the unit is turning on the fan, I wouldn't suggest trying to shut it off. It probably needs the air flow.

Speaking of which, make sure the entire computer -- the entire case -- isn't being blocked. The computer will need room to "breath". All vents should be free of any clutter and dust.

Assuming everything is as it should be if it continues, the server (or computer) may be being taxed excessively. What are you using it for?

UPDATE: based on your revision, I think you should check to see if you can "turn down" the processor. This is the oposite of overclocking though this can sometimes be done from the BIOS. (I'm only suggesting this if it can be done in the BIOS. ). If you can decrease the clock speed of the processor, it may not run as hot.

But, it still stand to ensure that the computer can receive proper air flow -- even if that air is room temperature.

You may even want to consider adding some holes and additional external fans to the casing, if that is possible.

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Probably not relevant, but I once had a new DL 380 that ran the fans at high speed all the time. The issue turned out to be that the two CPU's were mismatched (different stepping levels I recall).

When the mismatch was resolved it behaved normally.

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  • Upgrade last bios (2011)
  • reboot the server
  • Unplugg all power cable
  • Push power-on buttom for 8 seg.
  • now plug all power cable again and that it.

Other option is using the smartstart CD go and clean the IML log.

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I found that the firmware update (HP Broadcom NX1 Online Firmware Upgrade Utility for Windows Server x64 Editions (cp025019) in the latest support pack was causing the fans to keep ramping up and down. Very annoying. Removed that "upgrade" and back to normal. -My 2cents

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There might be some settings in the BIOS. But from my experience it takes a good amount of heat for those fans to kick on so high... I have only heard them full bore while rebooting or the drivers are not working in the OS correctly. I also noticed with VMware ESXi the fans run a little faster then the slowest speed after I did a BIOS update...

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