A Home cinema forum. HomeCinemaBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » HomeCinemaBanter forum » Home cinema newsgroups » Tivo personal television
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Noisey hard drives



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old September 24th 03, 08:33 PM
Scott Streeter
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Noisey hard drives


A friend at work passed on his series one to me since he was
upgrading. I think TiVo is great (now that I have one) put the hard
drives are loud. He had purchased an extra one off 9th Tee and
commented that's the louder one. I was thinking of getting hard drive
enclosures for them to silence them but I don't want to overheat the
drives either. Has anyone done something like this already?
Recommendations? Thanks.

--
Scott Streeter

http://www.wpi.edu/~ss/
  #2  
Old September 24th 03, 08:49 PM
Bao H. Lammy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Scott Streeter" wrote
A friend at work passed on his series one to me since he was
upgrading. I think TiVo is great (now that I have one) put the hard
drives are loud. He had purchased an extra one off 9th Tee and
commented that's the louder one. I was thinking of getting hard drive
enclosures for them to silence them but I don't want to overheat the
drives either. Has anyone done something like this already?
Recommendations? Thanks.


Put it in a well-ventilated enclosure. Take the drive out and
attach it to your PC (if it's a Maxtor drive) and run the Maxtor
drive acoustics setting program (AMSET.EXE) on it. Put the
recorder on a vibration damping mat -- never tried this one.
Introduce more ambient noise to the room, like white noise,
while you are sleeping. Turn your speakers up if the noise is
actually bothering you while watching recordings.


  #3  
Old September 24th 03, 09:03 PM
Scott Streeter
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Bao H. Lammy" writes:

"Scott Streeter" wrote
A friend at work passed on his series one to me since he was
upgrading. I think TiVo is great (now that I have one) put the hard
drives are loud. He had purchased an extra one off 9th Tee and
commented that's the louder one. I was thinking of getting hard drive
enclosures for them to silence them but I don't want to overheat the
drives either. Has anyone done something like this already?
Recommendations? Thanks.


Put it in a well-ventilated enclosure. Take the drive out and
attach it to your PC (if it's a Maxtor drive) and run the Maxtor
drive acoustics setting program (AMSET.EXE) on it. Put the
recorder on a vibration damping mat -- never tried this one.
Introduce more ambient noise to the room, like white noise,
while you are sleeping. Turn your speakers up if the noise is
actually bothering you while watching recordings.


amset won't work becaues it's just the idle "whine" that's
annoying. When I'm watching TV it's fine but when the TV is off it's
all I can hear in the living room.

--
Scott Streeter

http://www.wpi.edu/~ss/
  #4  
Old September 24th 03, 09:13 PM
Brad Bishop
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Scott Streeter" wrote in message
...

A friend at work passed on his series one to me since he was
upgrading. I think TiVo is great (now that I have one) put the hard
drives are loud. He had purchased an extra one off 9th Tee and
commented that's the louder one. I was thinking of getting hard drive
enclosures for them to silence them but I don't want to overheat the
drives either. Has anyone done something like this already?
Recommendations? Thanks.


Get a non-noisy hard drive:
http://www.storagereview.com/comparison.html

Select 'Idle Noise' from the drop down and click on 'Sort'.

The Seagate is what I use (it's ~$100 from pricewatch) and I can't hear a
thing out of it. FDB (Fluid Dynamic Bearing) drives seem to be pretty good
for low noise.

Good luck.

Brad


  #5  
Old September 24th 03, 09:18 PM
Bao H. Lammy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Scott Streeter" wrote
Put it in a well-ventilated enclosure. Take the drive out and
attach it to your PC (if it's a Maxtor drive) and run the Maxtor
drive acoustics setting program (AMSET.EXE) on it. Put the
recorder on a vibration damping mat -- never tried this one.
Introduce more ambient noise to the room, like white noise,
while you are sleeping. Turn your speakers up if the noise is
actually bothering you while watching recordings.

amset won't work becaues it's just the idle "whine" that's
annoying. When I'm watching TV it's fine but when the TV is off it's
all I can hear in the living room.


Then I'd definitely go with placing it on a soft rubber placemat
inside a well-ventilated enclosure. Front glass door that closes
with ventilated back or something like that -- a box that the
remote control can penetrate, iow.


  #6  
Old September 24th 03, 09:31 PM
Phill.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article ,
Scott Streeter wrote:

amset won't work becaues it's just the idle "whine" that's
annoying. When I'm watching TV it's fine but when the TV is off it's
all I can hear in the living room.


Do you have extra good hearing, are you under 30 years old?
  #7  
Old September 24th 03, 09:52 PM
Scott Streeter
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Phill." writes:

In article ,
Scott Streeter wrote:

amset won't work becaues it's just the idle "whine" that's
annoying. When I'm watching TV it's fine but when the TV is off it's
all I can hear in the living room.


Do you have extra good hearing, are you under 30 years old?


I'm 36 and my hearing is fine. I guess I can just jam an ice pick in
my ear... :P

--
Scott Streeter

http://www.wpi.edu/~ss/
  #8  
Old September 25th 03, 11:31 PM
jcondon
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Doesn't have to do this on a win9x or lower operating system? Doesn't
NT, win2K, and WinXP mess up the drive signature?

Bao H. Lammy wrote:


Put it in a well-ventilated enclosure. Take the drive out and
attach it to your PC (if it's a Maxtor drive) and run the Maxtor
drive acoustics setting program (AMSET.EXE) on it. Put the
recorder on a vibration damping mat -- never tried this one.
Introduce more ambient noise to the room, like white noise,
while you are sleeping. Turn your speakers up if the noise is
actually bothering you while watching recordings.



  #9  
Old September 26th 03, 05:17 AM
Bao H. Lammy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Put it in a well-ventilated enclosure. Take the drive out and
attach it to your PC (if it's a Maxtor drive) and run the Maxtor
drive acoustics setting program (AMSET.EXE) on it. Put the
recorder on a vibration damping mat -- never tried this one.
Introduce more ambient noise to the room, like white noise,
while you are sleeping. Turn your speakers up if the noise is
actually bothering you while watching recordings.

"jcondon" wrote
Doesn't have to do this on a win9x or lower operating system? Doesn't
NT, win2K, and WinXP mess up the drive signature?


To tell you the truth, I'm not sure. When pulling drives out of
the DVR and putting it in one's PC for whatever reason, it's a
good idea to make a backup using MFS Tools anyway. A
good time to set with AMSET is when upgrading to larger
hard drives. And you don't have to use Windows at all, but a
"lower" OS. You can use DOS or Caldera's DRDOS, the
latter of which Maxtor uses themselves on their drive diag
boot disk.


  #10  
Old September 26th 03, 07:41 AM
jcondon
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Your right. When I did my DirecTivo upgrade I just disconnected the
PC's normal HD and booted from the MFS Tools floppy just to avoid any
problems.

Bao H. Lammy wrote:

Doesn't have to do this on a win9x or lower operating system? Doesn't
NT, win2K, and WinXP mess up the drive signature?



To tell you the truth, I'm not sure. When pulling drives out of
the DVR and putting it in one's PC for whatever reason, it's a
good idea to make a backup using MFS Tools anyway. A
good time to set with AMSET is when upgrading to larger
hard drives. And you don't have to use Windows at all, but a
"lower" OS. You can use DOS or Caldera's DRDOS, the
latter of which Maxtor uses themselves on their drive diag
boot disk.



 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Denon AVR2500 lost manual need to know how to hard reset harry palmer Home theater (general) 2 December 7th 04 07:48 PM
Recording HD signal on DVD Recorder wtih Hard Drive Ron Chusid High definition TV 4 September 11th 04 07:18 AM
Suggested hard drives? Richard Harman Tivo personal television 5 September 23rd 03 04:51 PM
2 different speed Hard drives Dan Tivo personal television 3 September 21st 03 02:33 PM
Tivo record quality...adding new hard drive? Phillipe Tivo personal television 1 August 16th 03 09:08 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:36 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2021 HomeCinemaBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.