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My imac has 32 gb of ram and runs pro tools mega sessions better than the brand new Mac mini. My imac is completely silent with a few minor exceptions ( running video while recording AND sometimes intense Bounce to Disk Fires up the fans, but thats never during recording or listening.) In particular, if you hear a whine, send it back, because most of them don’t do that.My mac mini in the studio B has yet to make even a tiny sound. In particular, if you hear a whine, send it back, because most of them don’t do that.īased on the wildly differing accounts about the fan noise, it seems likely there’s some kind of manufacturing defect that affects some of them. I’m very much looking forward to buying a Mac Studio, even if it has an always present (but by most accounts barely audible) fan, knowing it never gets any louder, no matter how hard you push it.īased on the wildly differing accounts about the fan noise, it seems likely there’s some kind of manufacturing defect that affects some of them. I personally need a lot more CPU for plugins, as I use lots of CPU hungry plugins, and I’ve already had to increase my buffer to 256 samples 44.1) to avoid dropouts.
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If you currently have a “silent” iMac that never gets noisy, it means you don’t need to upgrade your machine, so you should not be in the market for a Mac Studio anyway. As soon as I’m using more than 50% CPU, the fans run non-stop and they are loud and annoying. I’ve never used an iMac Pro, but the standard 27” iMacs are only silent when you’re not using most of the available CPU/GPU power. Move along.Īs an iMac 5K owner I have to call BS on “silent iMacs”. It would be one thing if you had posted once or twice but I have read this thread and watched you and others with no first hand experience keep on posting. Step back from the keyboard go back to your studio and make some music You are completely speculating off what others say and posting endlessly about noise from a computer model you have no first hand experience with? I guess the question is, as they iterate into M2, M3 and more cores are we going to lament a golden age at the beginning of the Apple Silicon machines where they were truly silent, replaced with a later age where they're very multicore-powerful but 'mostly silent'.So you basically you don’t own a Mac Studio. I think the iMac Pro is the quietest previous generation Mac that I know of, all reports I read of that computer were that the fans just didn't kick in until really needed, and when they did it would be a trickle, so it was possible, but obviously much more possible now with the Arm chips.
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You can also build a PC these days that will make no fan noise until you're playing Warzone or crunching out video from Blender or something. Noisy computers are not an inevitability. My 16 inch M1 Max is completely silent, I've never been able to make the fans fire up in 4 months, it's as quiet as the fanless M1 Air I had before it.
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For starters, well-recorded samples exist only because there are still engineers who know how to create them. Their experiences and needs are simply different, but I agree they can benefit from learning recording fundamentals. I don't look down on young engineers and producers who have grown up with MIDI and computers. This is where I expect to find computers in a machine room or cabinet. When I need commercial-quality recording, I'll book a proper studio, with the understanding that "studio" is all about having access to excellent rooms and input chains, with engineers who know how to use them. I can work in a digital production suite pretty well knowing these limits. arranging SD3 sessions with sources recorded by George Massenburg rather than setting up and mic-ing drum kits.

Many years ago I roamed among the dinosaurs and practiced the art of recording, then moved into urban spaces where working in the box often makes more sense for my projects. If you do not have a issue with a little fan noise.GREAT, have at it.This ^^^. Especially for those of us dinosaurs who still use mics and real instruments that are sometimes VERY QUIET themselves.Īll the blowback about engineers concerned about fan noise is typically from virtual instrument using midi lovers who don't understand what a recording studio needs to be for some people. So its very helpful to hear reports about REAL WORLD fan noise. Which leads me to today, i have my SILENT Imac in the control/cutting room. For more than 20 years my macs were placed in a machine room.
