Loud Roars in a pc are usually a bad chassis fan. Try stopping the fan with a finger or unplug it. Sound should go away.
I’ve always stopped chassis fans with the edge of my finger. But, it’s safer to unplug it. They either plug in to the motherboard or a power supply plug.
The manufacture’s website should have an app to test the drive and read error/performance data (S.M.A.R.T). It will display failure indicators. If this is a new noise you better back-up your data.
Big drives can make a lot of noise functioning properly. It could be a mounting issue, good quality cases have rubber bushings to help isolate vibration. Quiet PC enthusiasts recommend 2.5" drives (notebook size) which run much cooler and quieter. I put together a new system last spring and the 1 TB drive was by far the loudest (and hottest at idle) component. I went so far as to suspend mine by bungee - a pretty easy trick which reduced the noise from freakin loud to barely audible. Google if you are curious.
Would there be a reason for the drive to start spinning if nothing on it was activated? The ONLY things on that drive are video files, and I wasn’t watching anything at the time.
I agree I have seen a lot of drives that make noise simply because they are not screwed in correctly.
What kind of drive do you have?
Start -> Type “Device Manager” (wthout quotes) -> Then when this opens look for Disk Drives -> Click plus sign
This will tell you the manufacturer and number of drive
Then you go to the manufactuers website and they will have downloadable tools for S.M.A.R.T tests.
First, let’s confirm that it’s actually the hard drive. Turn off the computer and unplug the power to all of the hard drives. Turn the computer back on. It won’t boot up, but all the fans and CD/DVD drives should spin up. If the noise is gone, then turn the computer back off and plug only the boot drive back in. Turn on the computer. Still no noise? Turn off the computer and keep adding drives until you isolate which one is causing the noise. Then, download the utility program that the drive vendor (find out which vendor’s drive you have by Markxxx’s description above).
Either way, if it’s the drive making a loud roaring noise, it’s time to get any data you’d like to save off.
Okay - I downloaded the diagnostic from WD, looks like it could take quite a while. When it accessed the drive, it sounded a bit different (and maybe a different area than the roar), so I’m hoping it’s the fan. Thanks - I’ll keep this updated.
Assuming the drive is mounted properly and you’re not misidentifying the source of the noise, a noisy drive (ie much noiser than normal past operation) is often indicative of incipient drive failure.
Update - it was the fan. It was roaring this morning, and I got down, dug the tower out from under my desk, and saw/heard the noise coming directly from the fan. Stopping it with a pen stopped the noise. Looks like I’ll get a new fan! (Yay - I get to learn something new about installing hardware into my computer!)
Also - I ran the diagnostics, and it “passed”. However, it said that the SMART diagnostic wasn’t available. Clearly I downloaded the wrong program. Anyone want to help me find the right on on Western Digital’s page? It’s a 2TB Caviar Black internal drive.
Did the fan go into ‘high speed’ due to high temperature? Was it really dusty inside the case? Is dust building up on things that should be (more or less) clean? You might try giving a really good cleaning (if warranted), including getting the dust out of the cooling-fins and other places where air-flow is critical.
It is not unusual for fans to have several speeds that are temperature-controlled. If temperatures are in doubt, you might try Speedfan as a monitoring program.
The room it’s in is really cold right now - but the vents were a little dusty. When I get the new fan, I’ll make sure to blast the insides and give it all a good cleaning. (Lots and lots of soapy water, right? )
I figured it wasn’t the hard drive. Hard drives click, whirr and grind, but don’t generally roar. I’d now be concerned as to why the fan started spinning faster. Fans don’t generally just start spinning up for no reason.
I just shove mine into the dishwasher. make sure its upside down, so the water can drain out.
[/smart ass]
Not sure what you meant by “The room it’s in is really cold right now…” but the room temperature won’t have much effect on the computer’s temperatures. If the CPU heatsink’s fins are clogged with dust, the CPU will roast while the fan spins futilely at 100%.
Ah!
That reminds me of the famous DOS Drain.com program.
You copied it to someones computer (from a floppy) and left it running. It showed a screen with the normal C: prompt. But as soon as someone pressed a key, you got this sequence:
SYSTEM ERROR: WATER DETECTED IN C: DRIVE
NOW DRAINING (several seconds of the sound of water draining down a pipe)
DRAINING COMPLETE; NOW INITIATING SPIN DRY (sound of a spin dryer in action)
REPAIR COMPLETE: READY
(Program ends, so the normal C: prompt appears)
I had great fun putting this on people computers, many years ago.