Comments

Red Prince wrote on 2/3/2017, 9:13 AM

What kind of noise?

He who knows does not speak; he who speaks does not know.
                    — Lao Tze in Tao Te Ching

Can you imagine the silence if everyone only said what he knows?
                    — Karel Čapek (The guy who gave us the word “robot” in R.U.R.)

Guyper wrote on 2/3/2017, 11:05 PM

What kind of noise?

I think the noise comes from the fan which spins more quickly.

Is rendering 60 FPS supposed to be as quiet as when you render video to 30FPS?

Red Prince wrote on 2/3/2017, 11:11 PM

In theory, it should make no difference. But I suppose if it has twice as much work to do, the computer may produce more heat, which can make the fans spin faster.

He who knows does not speak; he who speaks does not know.
                    — Lao Tze in Tao Te Ching

Can you imagine the silence if everyone only said what he knows?
                    — Karel Čapek (The guy who gave us the word “robot” in R.U.R.)

john_dennis wrote on 2/4/2017, 12:31 PM

Could you record a few seconds of the noise and post? Do you have an application to display temperatures and fan speeds?

Musicvid wrote on 2/4/2017, 1:23 PM

Many fans speed up as the CPU or GPU heats up.

TheHappyFriar wrote on 2/4/2017, 1:35 PM

The final file FPS shouldn't make the CPU/GPU work any harder, if your CPU/GPU can render X frames per second, that's the fastest it can render.

Could be that you're using two different codec's or codec settings that change other things on how the CPU/GPU work (IE GPU rendering on/off, etc)

NickHope wrote on 2/5/2017, 3:06 AM

I'd also be surprised if the FPS makes a difference in processor heat within the same codec.

Do you have an application to display temperatures and fan speeds?

For CPU temperature I can recommend CoreTemp. I always have it running minimized so I see the highest temperature in my notification area.

Some settings I use:

Be sure to uncheck the game stuff when you install it.