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ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason

I have a ga-p35-ds3l board, it has been working with no trouble for the past three years, and continues to function properly as far as I can tell. I installed a new hard drive yesterday, and since then, the PC speaker has been emitting a low-frequency tone continuously.  This is NOT the sharp, fairly high-pitched alarm noise that you expect to hear to alert you to overheating or whatever, but rather a fairly low-frequency continuous tone.

I have an Intel Q6600 quad-core CPU, 2GB of G-skill memory, and 5 hard drives. The computer usually runs Linux Mint 10.

The sound starts soon after turning on the computer, it stops once for about 5 seconds during the boot process, and then continues until the computer is turned off.

I searched through the BIOS options for any kind of alarm, the only one I found was the fan alarm, which was already disabled. I tried booting the computer with the new hard drive removed, and with all fans except the CPU fan disabled. None of these had any effect on the noise.

I do not know that the motherboard is the source of this problem, but I am not sure what else would be. Can anyone give me any clues about what is causing this? If I can't figure it out, I will have to unplug the PC speaker, and I would really prefer not to do that.

Thanks for any help.

Aussie Allan

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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #1 on: June 19, 2011, 08:03:53 am »

 What  is the wattage of your PSU ?

 How old is the PSU ?

 Have tried reducing the load (CPU) substantially by disconnecting all but critical components.

 Disconnecting the speaker would not be a good idea, besides being a band-aid fix, the board MAY be trying to tell you something like "Help Me"

 At three computer years old, no spring chicken any more, but lets see if we can find the problem!

 Aussie Allan
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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #2 on: June 19, 2011, 08:43:08 am »
The PSU is a 500W Antec Earthwatts. A few years ago, I checked the power load (at the wall outlet) with a meter, and saw about 120W. This was with 4 HDs - exact same hardware I have now, with the exception of the one new HD.

The PSU, and every other component besides the extra storage disks, was bought new, at the same time in may 2008, so it's all about three years old. Also FYI, this thing has been running nearly continuously since I bought it. I do take care to keep it in open space (not in a cabinet like some people) and I remove dust from fans and vents every few months.

I tried running the computer with 4 of the 5 HDs disconnected (from both power and signal) (the new one was one of the 4), and with the 2 case fans disconnected. The only other significant components I have to disconnect are an optical drive, memory card reader (I can't imagine either of those use much power when not in use?), and graphics card. I don't think I'm going to be taking the graphics card out without some reason to believe it's causing the noise.

It does seem like some kind of heat or power warning, except for two things:
1) It started literally immediately after connecting the new HD (at the time when I first connected the new HD, only three HDs were connected - one fewer than normal).
2) It does not sound like any motherboard alarm I have ever heard before - if you don't focus on it, it almost sounds like the whir of a fan (though I am 99% certain it is not a fan), because of how low the pitch is. In my experience, a motherboard alarm is high-pitched enough that when it turns on, you are certain you are hearing an alarm. My roommate can't even distinguish the noise from the fan whir.

I did switch around some of the SATA ports when I was moving HDs around - there isn't any reason this should cause a problem, is there?

Thanks for your help.
« Last Edit: June 19, 2011, 08:46:34 am by monguin61 »

Aussie Allan

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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #3 on: June 19, 2011, 10:14:39 am »

 It may sound really silly but get about 2 feet of flexible tubing and think like a Doctor!... stick one end in your lug-hole (ear) and move the other end around in the computer starting with the PC speaker.......this will at least narrow it down to where the dam sound is coming from......even some garden hose will work OK.... and come back with your findings.

 Aussie Allan
i7-4790K @4.8GHz 24/7 water clock
MSI XPower AC
32GB corsair  2666Mhz
 GTX-1070Ti full cover
Lange DDC elite pump
G changer360 Rad x2
Phobya 450 balancer
W10 Pro-64
Zigor 2000 UPS
1x500GB for clone
6x2tb- raid5-Storage
C: Evo 970 Pro 512gb
Scratch:Evo 970 Plus 512gb

Dark Mantis

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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #4 on: June 19, 2011, 10:49:00 am »
Hi

Firstly it might be a good idea to just disconnect the motherboard speaker to see if the noise is actually coming from there or just a component noise like a HDD whirring.

Secondly try just using your finger to stop the graphics card fan for a few seconds to see if it could be that.
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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #5 on: June 19, 2011, 10:53:37 am »
It turned out to be my floppy drive/card reader, which I have used precisely zero times since I bought it for $10 three years ago... that thing is gone. The PC speaker is not visible at all, but I'm pretty sure it's right next to the bay I had that floppy drive in.

I assume it's the floppy motor making the noise, god knows why or how, I really don't care now that I figured where it's coming from.

Thanks for the help, and sorry my problem turned out to be completely inappropriate for this forum...

Aussie Allan

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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #6 on: June 19, 2011, 11:00:05 am »

 Not at all, ...Some times you just need a sounding board to work it out for yourself......I talk to the dog a lot!, Blo*dy smart dog that one ;)

 Aussie Allan
i7-4790K @4.8GHz 24/7 water clock
MSI XPower AC
32GB corsair  2666Mhz
 GTX-1070Ti full cover
Lange DDC elite pump
G changer360 Rad x2
Phobya 450 balancer
W10 Pro-64
Zigor 2000 UPS
1x500GB for clone
6x2tb- raid5-Storage
C: Evo 970 Pro 512gb
Scratch:Evo 970 Plus 512gb

Dark Mantis

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Re: ga-p35-ds3l making low-frequency alarm noise for no apparent reason
« Reply #7 on: June 19, 2011, 12:32:46 pm »
Not a problem at all. In fact you never know when someone else might benefit from your experience anyway. You might find that you haven't even got a speaker installed.
Gigabyte X58A-UD7
i7 920
Dominators 1600 x6 12GB
6970 2GB
HX850
256GB SSD, Sam 1TB, WDB320GB
Blu-Ray
HAF 932

Gigabyte Z68X-UD5-B3
i7 3770K
Vengeance 1600 16GB
6950 2GB
HCP1200W
Revo Drive x2, 1.5TB WDB RAID0
16x DLRW
StrikeX S7
Full water cooling
3 x 27" Iiy