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There’s been a number of complaints in forums about MacBook Air heat problems and fan noise or fan running constantly. What causes these heat issues? What’s the fix? Does it affect the i5 model as well as the more powerful i7? This article addresses fan noise and heat issues with the current MacBook Air 2011 / 2012 models, released mid-July 2011.
Here’s a video a Mac Crazy user sent in of watching video online with his MacBook Air i5 13 inch. The fan is loud! (Thanks to Rajulun for sharing this view with Mac Crazy – you are a star!) MacBook Air Fan Noise First, lets start with a bit of background of why the MacBook Air get hot and why it has a fan. The MacBook Air has one fan inside it, at least in the late-2010 & mid-2011 models.
The fan’s job is to keep the MacBook Air’s chips from overheating by pushing hot air out the exhaust port. The exhaust port is behind the keyword, at the screen hinge.
The MacBook Air fan runs constantly by design. The fan runs at or above a minimum speed while the MacBook Air is running. On my late-2010 MacBook Air 11 inch, the minimum speed is 2000 revolutions per minute (rpm). At this minimum fan speed, during use, the fan can’t be heard by most people. If you put one ear to the keyboard, you can hear the fan.
Some people, in a very quiet room, with very sensitive hearing, may be able to hear the fan at the minimum speed. When the MacBook Air is busy it generates more heat. The fan then runs faster to keep the Mac cool. At higher speeds, you can easily hear the fan. This is a normal cause of fan noise on the MacBook Air – MacBook Air is busy, fans are keeping it cool. Fan noise is like sweating – it’s a response to strenuous activity.
Examples of activities that make the MacBook Air busier are:. running many apps,. using web sites with animation (Flash) or video,. playing games,. playing or editing video, particularly HD video The room temperature will affect how fast the fan will need to run to keep the MacBook Air cool. In a hotter room, the fan will need to run faster. The highest fan speed on my late-2010 MacBook Air is 6500 rpm.
You can check your MacBook Air’s fan speed with the free. IStat Pro will also measure the internal temperatures of your MacBook Air. If you have constant fan noise, and your MacBook Air is not doing heavier activities, your Mac’s System Management Controller (SMC) may be confused.
You can fix this with a. MacBook Air Too Hot The hottest temperature on the bottom of the case I’ve seen quoted in the press is 105F / 41C and in the wild is 109F / 43C (thanks for commenting ). This benchmark was running Half Life 2 Episode 2, which works both the main processor and the graphics processor – both of which generate heat. Both processors are on the same silicon chip in the new MacBook Air.
(If you have a higher MacBook Air 2012 / 2011 bottom case temperature, please take a screenshot and leave a comment below.) If your MacBook Air is getting too hot, there are some possible fixes below. Heat and Fan Noise: Just the MacBook Air i7, or MacBook Air i5 As Well? The fan noise and heat issues are affecting the i5 MacBook Air as well.
Complaints of the MacBook Air heating up, overheating and fan noise are not restricted to the Intel Core i7 MacBook Air. I’ve had a reader send in a video of his MacBook Air i5 with a loud fan. MacBook Air Heat Issues and Fan Noise Causes There are at least several possible causes for the MacBook Air high heat and noisy fan:. Software functions that consistently use CPU are being used, e.g.
Video encoding, finding faces in iPhoto. Apps or other software running in the background is consistently consuming CPU.
Adobe Flash, the technology used to deliver some animated ads in web pages and most web video is consistently using CPU. This is a specific, common case of the cause above. Software runs at startup that is not compatible with Mac OS X Lion. The software keeps trying to run and keeps falling over causing load on the CPU. The MacBook Air’s System Management Controller ( SMC), responsible for controlling the fans, has become confused. Cause #1: Software that Consistently Uses Processor Software that is performing an activity that consistently uses can cause the MacBook Air to get very hot and the fans to run loudly.
A few examples of heavy software are:. Video export, encoding or format conversion (transcoding). For example, Handbrake for converting videos for display on iPhone or Apple TV. Importing photos to iPhoto or performing recognition of faces in your photo library. Playing some HD video. How much processor video playback uses depends on many factors, including video resolution (720p, 1080i, 1080p), frame rate, detail in video (bit rate), how sophisticated the encoding is (e.g. High profile), the video player used to play back the video, and how the video player is configured!
Generally 720p is fine, 1080p is fine if it’s a lower bitrate Quicktime H.264 movie playing back in Quicktime, and other 1080i or 1080p (high bitrate or non-Quicktime format, e.g. MKV or AVI) will get the MacBook Air hot and fans will run. Playing web video. Web video uses Flash, and Flash video playback is less optimised than Quicktime. I’ve noticed that occasionally a web videos use several times more CPU than another at the same resolution.
I suspect that is because some web videos uses formats that Flash is optimised for (probably H.264), and others use formats that aren’t optimised in Flash (probably non-H.264 Flash video ‘FLV’). I haven’t confirmed this.
3D rendering (e.g. Video editing and effects (e.g.
Final Cut, Adobe Premiere, After Effects). Exporting a music track (mixdown), from a multi-track music project. Playing 3D games (e.g. Portal, Half Life). Running benchmarks. If you are doing sustained processor intensive work expect it to get warm or hot and for the fan to become audible or noisy. Using either the main processor (CPU) or graphics processor (GPU) generates heat.
In these cases that MacBook Air is usually performing normally. Some of the heat is dispersed to the case, so the case feels hot. The fan speeds up pull cool are in and push hot air out of the MacBook Air. Cause #2: Software in the Background Consistently Consuming CPU Every application running in the background uses power and heats up the MacBook Air. If you use less battery, your MacBook Air gets less hot. If it gets less hot, it doesn’t have to use the fan. And on the way, you might double your battery life.
You can see how much power each app is drawing, use the free software. To help cool down your laptop, quit background apps or pause them using the 3rd party software. Note that it’s not just apps running in the background that consumes power. Other background services (often called daemons) can also consume power. Mostly these are pretty efficient, but for power users, it’s worth checking.
See my article “” for more info on reducing power usage and making your Mac cooler and quieter. Cause #3: Adobe Flash Consistently Using the Processor Flash is software that can be installed as a plugin to most web browsers, such as Safari, FireFox & Opera. Google’s Chrome browser includes Flash. Flash is mainly used to include animated and video ads in web pages, to deliver web video and provide games in webpages. Flash is not uncommon for charting. It’s also often used for entires sites for big product launches, like Hollywood movies.
Flash tends to use a lot of CPU. Most people who use Flash aren’t professional programmers, they’re usually creatives. One poorly written banner ad can swallow an entire core of your MacBook Air’s processor. While the latest versions of Flash do some hardware acceleration for video playback, Flash still uses considerably more CPU to play video than native video players like Quicktime X. Consider if a Flash banner ads is not visible: it’s in other browser tab, your web browser is in the background while you’re in another app (e.g. Word), or the banner is in part of the webpage that isn’t showing in the browser window. The Flash portions of webpages continue to run and consume your processor and battery even when you can’t see them.
Flash’s heavy use of CPU was running of the reasons Apple doesn’t include Flash on the iPhone or iPad, and why Flash doesn’t come preinstalled on the MacBook Air. To minimize Flash’s grip on your processor, you have a few alternatives:. Use one browser window at a time.
Quit your browser when you’re not using it. Use the free software for Safari. It stops Flash automatically running; it requires you the click a Flash part of a webpage to make it run – which sometimes you do (e.g. A YouTube video).
Deinstall Flash. Deinstall Flash. Use Safari without Flash. When you really need Flash, use Google Chrome instead of Safari. Chrome includes Flash built in. Use ($0.99) to automatically stop Flash running in the background.
Some of these techniques can be combined. For example ClickToPlugin plus FlashFrozen. If you watch video on websites that also have animated ads beside the video (instead of in the video), you’re getting the double penalty of Flash video plus Flash ads at the same time. ClickToPlugin might be a good option here. You can just click on the main video to enable it, and leave the ads disabled, giving you the best chance of the MacBook Air staying cool and quiet.
See “” for more background. Flash seems to be the most common cause of the MacBook Air overheating and fan running fast. Cause #4: Software Incompatible with Lion Some software doesn’t work with Lion. If it contains software that runs in the background and restarts automatically, the software can start over and over again. I’ve seen one case of this, when someone migrated five years of accumulated software from their old Mac to their new MacBook Air using Apple Migration Assistant.
The person was very technical and fixed the broken software themselves. This may have been old HP printing software, but I haven’t confirmed this. For the technically inclined, there wasn’t much CPU usage, but with the process continually respawning the was a high run queue for the CPU. I’ve seen serveral cases where people an overheating MacBook Air and noisy fans ran the free utility and that fixed performance issues. Write a comment if you’d like more specifics. In none of these cases has anyone reported the root cause of the problem, but for now I’ll include these cases here. Cause #5: System Management Confused / Needs Reset Thanks so much to Chris posting a about this: I was experiencing a similar problem on my new MBA 13″ with i7 (loud fan with nothing running), along with some other odd issues related to battery and power.
System preferences (energy saver) claimed my battery was charged at 0% (though I knew that was not the case), and I couldn’t add the battery status to the menu bar (I would click that option, the menubar with reconfigure as if to accommodate the new icon, but then it would disappear). Furthermore, when plugged in to AC, I got no lights (green or orange) on the MagSafe adapter. The support page at suggested that weird battery/power issues may be solved by an SMC reset, which I did. The fans have now stopped and the other symptoms that I mentioned have also gone away. Perhaps this can help with others. So Chris’s MacBook Air symptoms were:.
Loud fan with no apps running. Battery showing 0% charged in Energy Saver in System Preferences. Can’t add battery status to the menu bar. Status LED on MagSafe power connector not lighting up when plugged in. You may not have all these symptoms.
SMC reset instructions for a MacBook Air are:. Shutdown your MacBook Air (go to the Apple menu and choose “Shut Down”). Make sure your MacBook Air has external power.
Connect the power adaptor, if it isn’t already. Using the Air’s built-in keyboard (not a plug in keyboard or bluetooth keyboard), of the left hand side of the keyboard press Control-Shift-Option and on the top right of the keyboard, the power key at the same time. Release all the keys at the same time. Press the power key to start the computer. If this fixes your issue, consider below with a thank you for him. MacBook Air Fan Noise and Heat Issues Fixed? Did this help fix your MacBook Air fan running too fast / being too loud, of being very hot? Drop me a comment and let me know what you did, and how it worked for you.
Your comment, like Chris’s, may really help others, as we’re still learning which are the most common causes, and what are the best solutions. If this article helped, please clicking +1 or Like or even better link to this page from your blog or website. It helps people find this page ahead of older, less useful webpages. (MacWorld has 41 million links – help us catch up!) Thanks for visiting! Hi Tasman, definitely! (got your e-mail).
I’m now convinced my fan is in proper condition. As you described it can be heard just slightly in a fully silent environment. What more, that some low “tickling” noises can also be heard near the keyboard, this is due to interference noise from the electronics as I found somewhere on the internet.
So, no mechanical problems, everything seems in tolerance and I don’t want to miss my MBA! Btw, I’m using smcFanControl to monitor my fan and temperature, it’s a very lightweight program compared to iStats. And also free. I was experiencing a similar problem on my new MBA 13″ with i7 (loud fan with nothing running), along with some other odd issues related to battery and power.
System preferences (energy saver) claimed my battery was charged at 0% (though I knew that was not the case), and I couldn’t add the battery status to the menu bar (I would click that option, the menubar with reconfigure as if to accommodate the new icon, but then it would disappear). Furthermore, when plugged in to AC, I got no lights (green or orange) on the MagSafe adapter. The support page at suggested that weird battery/power issues may be solved by an SMC reset, which I did. The fans have now stopped and the other symptoms that I mentioned have also gone away. Perhaps this can help with others. Thank you so much for this post about the SMC reset, worked perfectly!
My fan was running very loudly and the back left corner of my Air was getting very hot. I followed the instructions on your post, downloaded the widget to monitor the internals, then shut the computer down and performed the reset. Upon restarting, the fan did not start up, the heat was gone, and the widget said my CPU temp went down from 82 to 47, and the fan went down from 6000rpm to 2000 rpm, incredible!
Thanks so much, big help! Sub: THOROUGHLY HARRASED AND REQUEST FOR REPLACEMENT OF MAC BOOK AIR IMMEDIATELY Please Note My Name is Kapil Chadha, Vice President (Aditya Birla Group) and have more than 5 gadgets of Apple namely (Macbook Air, Macbook Pro, Iphone-4, I-pad, I-Pod) and many others. Recently, on 20th August, 2011, I purchased the Macbook Air from (Receipt No. 4602, Vendor: Imagine Store, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India) and since the time of purchase the Macbook Air HAS been a GREAT PROBLEM and None the Centres in NEW DELHI, INDIA, NCR REgion are capable of giving the SErvice and as such the I have not been able to USE THE machine properly. Centre Visited for Resolving the Issues: a. UC Infosystems Pvt. Ltd., Naraina, New Delhi (Reason given: Downloading Speed: Very Slow and there is no alternative to download O/S LION) b.
MAC clinic Media Solutions Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi (IRRESPONSIBLE AND MISBEHAVIOR) from ONE of the staff and as such commented that WE ARE USELESS CUSTOMER and keep on PESTORING for issues: This is Inspite of submitting the macihne on 10th october, 2011 and enquired on 20th october, 2011. IF this is the attitude of the APPLE then I think I have made a MISTAKE in buying all APPLE products and spending huge amount of money.
At some Point of time we thought of Introducing / Replacing all the Laptop/Desktop of our Group Company with Apple approximate work stations i.e. BUT Now, due such gross MISBEHAVIOUR and UNPROFESSIONAL approach from your INDIAN counterpart I am forced to Re-think as my personal experience for the last 2 months has been dismal. Least of all NO one from Apple India has contacted for Solution, it is us who are forced to call repeateadly and keep on chasing for help. Please take note of above. Rgds Kapil Chadha Vice President Ultratech Cement Limited (Aditya Birla Group) New Delhi India Ph: 00 3203 Ph: 00 5003 Mobile: email. Hi everyone, Thanks for the detailed post, but unfortunately nothing worked in my case so far I have an MBA 11″ (late 2010) with the following problem: the fan (and most likely the processor) is still running when the computer goes on sleep mode. If I close the lid, or put it on sleep via the “power menu”, the fan will keep running, and my MBA will still be warm (not burning hot, just normally warm), even after hours (which seems to indicate that the processor is still running as well).
I sent the computer for service (it is still on warranty), they changed the logic board (mother board), but it came back with the same problem (!), which makes me think it must be software related However my problem occurs even when all applications are shut down Any thought on that problem? Also, I had one question regarding the reset of the SMC: I tried it out, but how can I be sure that it actually happened? I mean, basically there was nothing displayed, or the led on the magsafe did not do anything specific, so I don’t know if I didn’t do it right (thus if I should have noticed something happening) or if it is just the way it is Anyone who did the operation could help on that?
Thank you for your help:)! I had constant problems with heating with a 2009 Air (13″). Because of SSD failure after a year, I got myself a 2010 Air 11″. I NEVER had any problems with that, and remember only 2-3 times I could hear the fan, when in super high load. A few weeks ago I finally fed up with the small screen and decided to upgrade to the new 13″ (i5).
Unfortunately, the heating problem is back. This is especially evident when watching movies.
The fan runs very fast and is very loud. I never had this problem with the 11″ on similar usage. CPU is burning at 75-78C and fan yells at 5500-6300 RPM. Obviously, I’m quiet surprised and disappointed:-/. Fausto, I assume your temperature is in degrees celsius, and is measured from the sensor on the bottom of the MacBook Air case. Your MacBook Air is hot to touch. I’ll also assume you have a mid-2011 model MacBook Air.
55 C is the highest case temperature I’ve seen reported for a MacBook Air 2011, yet your fan speed is relatively low. (It should be able to clear 6000 rpm.) The “loud ticking sound” is probably not good.
The only component besides the fan that I think of that would be making a sound is the speakers, and that’s fairly unlikely. (In older Macs, a failing hard drive could make a ticking sound, but the MacBook Air has flash storage – no moving parts.) It sounds like your fan’s bearing may have failed, and it can’t spin up to high speeds. I’d pop into a friendly Apple dealer, and ask if a technician can have a quick listen to it. If you have a new MacBook Air, the repair will be covered by warranty. Let me know what you find out.
I don’t really care about the fan noise but the heat is definitely worrying. My new 2011 mba i5 gets up to 100 -105 degrees celsius while dvd authoring in windows 7 and only using about 50% of the cpu! In osx my fans stay at around 2000rpm until it gets up to 90c when they go a little faster to get it down to 80 when doing general web browsing and email.
It seems the fans kick in too late and so in Lion I use smc fan control to keep them at 4000rpm all the time to keep it at a reasonable temperature. I have yet to find a fan control for windows 7 though. Guess Ill have to get a cooling pad if I want to do intensive tasks, or replace my macbook air with a windows laptop.
Who’d of thought a £1000+ laptop would only have a stable temp while doing simple tasks! James, This is an absolutely awesome tip!
Thanks for sharing it. I had a silicon keyboard cover myself on my last white MacBook to keyboard clean.
I’ve always wondered why Apple leave an exaggerated gap around their keys for both MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. (Their wired and wireless keyboards are the same style.) The keys are literally above the key holes. The gap is big enough for some stuff to get in. Now it makes sense – heat / hot air can escape through the gaps. Thanks James!
Marc, For comparison to your situation: I’m writing this reply on a completely new MacBook Air 11 inch 1.6GHz i5 with 4GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD. The only software I’ve installed is Flash. In Activity Monitor, I’ve got 2.65GB of memory free.
I’ve just got Safari running, with three tabs open – one tab on Gmail, and two with WordPress (website management). Gmail and WordPress have a fair bit of JavaScript code that they download into the web browser. In Activity Monitor, my% User CPU is 0.25%,% System CPU is 0.25%, and% Idle CPU is 99.5%.
The most relevant stat in what you said is your% System CPU being at 80%. System CPU is the time your CPU is busy executing system calls in the Mac operating system. If your Mac Air is consistently staying with that high System CPU usage, that means your CPU is almost completely busy doing something, and the fan is needed to stop the CPU from getting hot. The big question here is what is your MacAir actually doing to eat all that CPU? It sounds like when you startup, there’s some software, maybe a background process, that’s very busy.
Luckily, we can find out what software process in guzzling all this CPU. Start the Activity Monitor app, which is in the Utilities folder inside your Applications folder. It shows a list of processes.
There’s a column that says “% CPU”. By clicking that column heading, ensure that column is sorted by descending CPU used (i.e. Biggest% CPU number at the top). Is there a process (or processes) consuming a lot of CPU? 80%) What’s the process name? Let us know what you find Marc.
Hi Taz, thank you for your long comment: funny thing is: no special processes consuming the cpu???? Prices with most CPU load is the activity monitor constantly with less than 5% and: my wife used it and after surfing slowly around the internet, everything went smooth, no cpu load, o fan noiseafter closing the MBA and opening it again: same sh.t,-) can there be any programs consuming cpu load or system activity without raising temp and without being shown in activity monitor? Best whishes marc. Marc, Can I confirm: At the time the fan is running loudly, the% System CPU is above 80%, and – at the same time – there is no process taking above 5% CPU.
(That is Activity Monitor.) If so, and given you’ve correctly applied an SMC reset, perhaps try running the Onyx utility: I just ran a bunch of stuff from Onyx (the permissions stuff, the monthly, weekly, daily, scripts), gave my system a reboot I don’t know why, but Onyx seems to clear some people’s issues with battery life and slow shutdown, so there’s a possibility it will work for your case. Let me know what you find Marc.
I have the MacBook Air 11″ 2011 model with i7 Processor. I thought the fan was running a little fast and loud and so I found your info via google search. I first installed Flash Frozen but that didn’t seem to change much. I have a friend who has the 13 inch and was experiencing the same and she went so far as to send it back and get a replacement.
I couldn’t stand the idea of being without what I think is a great notebook and so I tried the SMC reset you suggested and it calmed the fan to at most a whisper. Thanks Chris, I was having issues with fan noise on mid 2011 MacBook Air, but only when connected to Thunderbolt display.
SMC reset has fixed this. Just one thing to add: It didn’t work the first time. Some additional Googling suggested waiting 5 seconds between steps 4 and 5.
That did the job. Shutdown your MacBook Air (go to the Apple menu and choose “Shut Down”).
Make sure your MacBook Air has external power. Connect the power adaptor, if it isn’t already. Using the Air’s built-in keyboard (not a plug in keyboard or bluetooth keyboard), of the left hand side of the keyboard press Control-Shift-Option and on the top right of the keyboard, the power key at the same time. Release all the keys at the same time. Press the power key to start the computer.
Tasman, you might be my new favorite person. I was able to clear an old printer queue which helped immensely. I’ve been watching my CPU and fan speeds speed up with flash, but that resolves itself once I stop doing what I was doing. As long as my fan is under 3000 it doesn’t make audible noise. The one thing that stays high is my memory. Is that just because I have a lot saved?
Or is it something else? I also sent my computer back and they replaced the fan and logic board I’m so frustrated with this!
My father’s MBA is about two months older than mine and his NEVER has this issue. It seems totally arbitrary. Hi I have a 13″ MacBook Air i7 (Mid 2011 model), and I use Parallels Desktop quite frequently. I run AutoDesk Revit Architecture and while rendering, I was shocked to see the temperature rise to 94 degrees celsius. In a crazy frenzy, I downloaded a program called smsFanControl, and set the fan so it runs at 6500rpm non-stop.
(This is while rendering.it takes about 1hour for each render). The thing is, the fan was already running at max speed, and so the temperature stayed the same. After reading that you had never seen a temperature of greater than 50 degrees Celsius on a MBA, should I be concerned about my Mac? I tried removing the keyboard protector that I have on, and after testing it thoroughly, I found that it does not have an impact at all on the temperature, occasionally the temperature would rise by about 1 degrees.
Do you have any suggestions for other ways to keep the Air cool, as conventional cooling pads don’t work on Macs? Thanks a lot in advance ? Saif. I recently bought a, MBA 13″ i7. I recently noticed that the fan was getting really, really loud. Considering that this thing is still new, I wasn’t willing to fork over more money to fix a broken fan.
So I did what everyone does, when they don’t want to go to a doctor–I went to Google. When I stumbled upon your article, the first suggestion “running too many apps” made me laugh (and roll my eyes), but I checked my apps to see what was running anyways. I was shocked to discover that 12 different apps were running, including photoshop (with 1/2 dozen projects in progress) and games I had started, paused and forgotten. I started shutting programs down and my Mac started getting quieter and quieter.
The problem has been solved! But now that everything is back and healthy again I have stumbled upon a new problem. There is positively nothing to do when all the apps have been shut down. ? Thank you so much for the awesome article. It sure saved me a pretty penny. Interesting article, but its frustrating to see the continued spread of ignorance about flash. Yes, some stuff written in flash is poorly done, but most major applications that use flash are no worse than any other app.
I personally have written flash apps that are both very sophisticated and use little if any CPU. Blame bad programmers and discourage people from visiting poorly coded sites, sure, but flash is no more to blame than any other technology, and in fact, to provide the same functionality, nothing is as efficient of an animation engine that provides discreetly addressable animated art objects and sound tracks than flash. The flash hating is just as stupid as telling people to stop using electricity because a few bad electricians are out there. ::MY PROBLEM SOLVED:: “Hidden Apps Using Large CPU%” I had all the same symptoms as listed in the article. However, after following some of the recommended solutions, my fan was still working hard, which in turn, drained my battery very quickly. PROBLEM: I had hidden apps running in the background using upwards of 90% of my CPU usage. These running apps are hidden and do not show when pressing “cmd + tab”.
SOLUTION: – Do a spotlight search (cmd + spacebar) – Search for the pre-loaded (native) Apple app “Activity Monitor” – Look down the column of “% CPU” and seek out any apps that are using a high volume and close accordingly. – Subsequently, you will see a drop in fan speed (and in turn, fan noises) within a matter of minutes.
For the person who started the chat thread on this and all those who have also added some really constructive support, thank you!!! I recently purchased an i7 Mac Air. I really love it but this was becoming a big issue shortly after buying the device. The SMC reboot, adding the plugin to block Adobe flash and SMC fan control have together fixed my problem. I now have an acceptable battery life and a very cool running machine again. All while using Parallels XP running, SAP Client, word, excel and Powerpoint loaded as a test.
The basic machine is excellent, I have no doubt Apple will keep patching software updates to fine tune this little 11″ i& hot rod. My own findings: SMC Fan Control: helps with a cool user friendly indicator on the top menu bar to tell how the PC is running, no different to the gauges on your car, its great!!
No risk to the Machine with this, well designed and cold never comprise the PC’s integrity Click to plugin: This has for sure stopped making the web browser with all the junk out there that advertisers want to annoy you with. SMC Reboot: No doubt about it, the machine was confused about something and it all has calmed down. I was using the sleep mode after a heavy download via bluetooth.
I am certain there was some residual memory buffering / CPU issues that the machine could not break out of. The blower dryer and memory got stuck in serious stress mode!
Thankyou, happy Mac Booker! Thanks for really interesting and helpful postings! I wonder if I may pose a question to you too? My MacBook Pro (2.66 GHz, 8 GB RAM, 500 GB HD, OSX Lion 10.7.4) started to be very hot and noisy (fan) immediately after I installed the Microsoft Office for Mac Service Pack 2 (14.2) update specifically whenever I ran Outlook, despite no problem with Outlook prior to this. The CPU activity showed that Outlook was using approx. After 5 days I removed MS Office completely and reinstalled it without updating to SP2 and everything was fine again. Then some days later, when the fix was released for SP2 (14.2.1), I again installed it, and then the problem of excessive noise and overheating has resumed.
Then, to my dismay, my MBP stopped working altogether – Apple Support advised me to return it to the dealer, who found that a cable to the hard-disk was burned out — they replaced it within a day and I got my MBP back intact. I tried your suggestion for a SMC reset, but the CPU hyperactivity, the overheating, and the noisy fan persist whenever I try to run Outlook (not otherwise). I would be so grateful for any help — can you advise me?
Hi Tasman, Many, many thanks for your amazingly thoughtful and detailed reply, full of helpful suggestions! I showed your posting to our university IT people and they were highly impressed too. In fact I had already updated to 14.2.2 (and it didn’t make any difference), and had earlier tried uninstalling “Office for Mac 2011” then reinstalling without SP2 (which worked until I waited for the 14.2.2 “fix” and I tried afresh!).
In reply to your questions: I acquired this MacBook Pro almost 2 years ago, and I upgraded to Lion, and I did have Office 2008 previously. My email account is a standard Exchange one for this university (most people use PCs, not Mac).
Today, I tried your various suggested fixes, lastly creating a completely new user account but the computer immediately had high CPU use, started overheating and getting noisy so I’m back to square one ? and now I begin to think the best option is probably, as you suggest, to switch to Apple Mail and get used to it! I will try a little longer, if you think of any other possible solutions, but otherwise give up on Outlook.
Many thanks again, Ian. So let me get this straight Apple produces a computer that can’t handle multiple applications at one time, and that the Airs have a documented over-heating problem that leads to the computer freezing up but somehow it is the software companies’ fault and not Apple?? Riiiiight Apple should produce a computer that 1) doesn’t overheat, 2) can handle multiple threads, and 3) support that actually solves problems instead always blaming 3rd parties for their obvious design faults.
I’ve had constant over-heating problems with my MBA, and I think it is a terrible product if this is known behavior that has yet to be resolved by Apple. Pieter, Glad it worked! The iPad doesn’t heat up as much for a couple of reasons:. The iPad uses a slower, lower power processor which disappates less heat. The iPad descends from the iPhone, as device designed from the ground up for good battery life. The Mac operating system and Mac apps were designed in an environment when battery life is often an afterthought. The iPad’s operating system, iOS, was designed for good battery life.
Since iPad’s are usually used without being plugged in, most iPad application developers are aware of and fix issues that would cause a strong battery drain. Multitasking is deliberately limited by Apple on the iPad & iPhone. The operations apps can do in the background are limited, for example to using the GPS or streaming radio. Otherwise when you switch to another app on iOS, the app you are using is completely stopped, so it uses no power. On Macs, when you switch to another app, the current app continues to run, using CPU, which uses power. Hope that answers your question!
Hey Tas, I’d like to ad an experience: first you learned me to perform an smc-reset and I THOUGT the fan-noise was over. Unfortunately this was not the case. Though I was only running Pages, the fan reached top speeds of 6500 rpm+ and the cpu-temp reached 91 degr Celcius. So there had to be something causing this. I downloaded a trial version of AppTamer and right away the prulprit was found: KIES, the Samsung-software to backup, synchronize and update my Galaxy S phone was topping the list with a cpu usage of 139% (how is that possible?! ? and caused all the heat. I was so happy with this solution I bought AppTamer immediately for $14.- ? Don’t understand why Apple doesn’t put something similar on your MBA.
Okat, so App Tamer did the work, thanks to this discussion. Ro, There are failsafes to stop heat damage to your MacBook Air, but it is possible for the failsafes themselves to fail.
I can’t remember specifically if a current model 2011/2102 MacBook Air has been cooked, but MacBook Pros certainly have. (In the case I’m thinking of MacBook Pro that was upgraded to Mac OS X Lion.) I wouldn’t worry about normal operation. When your playing games, you expect the MacBook Air to get really hot, because both the CPU and the graphics chip (which are now on the same silicon chip) are both getting worked hard. Cooking your MacBook Air is more likely to happen if your MacBook Air is constantly, inappropriately hot. For example, if you boot your MacBook Air, are running nothing heavy and it’s getting really hot, try the fixes on this site. If it still stays really hot, take it in for service.
Hope this helps, -Tas. Tasman, Thats freaky, i almost didn’t try it wondering how in the hell that would fix the problem.
Its crazy i had another 11″ that got stolen back in last november and i replace it with the newest version in january. Lately i have noticed when i sit i my chair my legs getting hot as hell, and i could hear the fan running. I was like wtf is going on here, for the life of me i could never remember hearing my old one ever make noise or hear the fan and I’ve been noticing it a lot lately, and it was VERY hot to the touch on the bottom of computer which was starting to concern me. When i read about the max fan speed, i installed the widget you recommended and mine was running at 6490 so i knew something was up, i don’t do gaming or run any thing other than email and web browsing and some spreadsheets. However you figured that out is beyond me, but just in the time i read some of the responses and have typed this my laptop has completely cooled off and in 10 minutes the fan has stayed quiet. Crazy stuff, thanks for the post and the info. That fan running at that speed was crushing my battery lately.ive been thinking i needed to take to apple shop.thanks buddy!!
Father Ted, I’d check two things: First, do you have any fan control software running? Fan control software can pin the minimum fan speed up higher, as high as 6500rpm. Secondly, did you bring over any old software to your MBA? Some pre OS X Lion software, such as HP printer drivers, tries to keep starting again and again and fails. The Mac shows low CPU, but the process starting and failing repeatedly does load up the Mac. Does you Mac go straight to 6500rpm at boot, or does it take awhile?
Cheers, -Tas. I noticed my macbook air was consistently hot. This only recently started happening.
I first attributed it to being summer and perhaps being warmer. I was able to disprove this when I noticed my air was still hot when I was in a temperature controlled data center in a cool zone.
The one thing that I had recently changed to my Macbook air was installing Motorola Motocast for my Android phone. I decided to stop the running service and immediately my air got cooler. I have since uninstalled the Motocast application as I very rarely use it anyhow. I can completely understand the Macbook Air getting hot if running Diablo, WoW or a Windows virtual machine but the machine should not be hot when it is virtually idle. Long story short look at the services running on the top bar and if you don’t need them get rid of them.
Firstly thanks to Chris and Tasman for this useful tips. I tried everything in your post, but unfortunately it didn’t work for me in Mac Book Air 13” i5.
So I googled a bit more and the reason for the issue on my Mac was due to “Send to Kindle” app. Because of this app the bash process (checked via App Tamer) was occupying 21.5% of constant CPU Use, causing the temperature to go upto 80 degrees centigrade for the CPU and the fanspeed to go upto 6000 RPM. I uninstalled this app and immediately the Temperature came down to 49 degrees centigrade and the Fan Speed under 2000 RPM. The post that helped find this issue was I hope this helps others. Jon, Sorry to hear you haven’t had a win yet.
73 degrees celcius isn’t that bad, and 5607rpm is in the normal range of fan operation. The fan always runs – it’s just at lower speeds it’s hard to hear. When did you buy your MacBook Air?
(What model is it?) What’s the temperature of the room you’re in? What is your MacBook Air sitting on?
Is there anything blocking the air vent under the screen at the back of the MacBook Air? It sounds like you have some software using CPU that runs everytime you start your Mac. To find it: Run Activity Monitor.
Sort by the CPU column. What Apps are using the most CPU, and what percentage? Dear Tasman, I have a mac book air 13″ was bought in middle of 2011.I had the problem of noisy and high speed fan even when i dont work with several programs simultaneously.seems the fan running in depends on processors situation. I entered to monitoring menu and found that one program “(for me was: adobe synchronizing),The program occupied 80% of cpu even no work with programs.in result, any work /open any program could lead to speeding fan!in monitoring section quite the “program with high occupation on CPU” the fan noise gradually will less and stop!thank you for your support and attention. Hi Tasman I have the same problem with my Mac Mini. I swap my original 5400 HDD to a Seagate Momentus XT. Took care with the 2 heat sensors (checked with a magnifier) Checked the fan too.
Yesterday i removed the battery. At the first reboot the fan speed decreased and return to full speed. From the time i swapped the HDD my fan blows at full speed. The last thing i did’nt made is to switch back to the original HDD. I look to order a replacement fan too any idea?
The SMC reset seems to do nothing in my case (very obscur processus i think) Can you tell me the RIGHT way please? Hello, Have similar issues but different results to SMC reset.
My MBA 2011 13″ i5 has its fans running at 6500rpm, when cpu temp is. Hi Kim, That is strange. Your CPU temperature is nice and cool, you’re not pushing the CPU, you’ve done an SMC reset, and still the fan is running at maximum speed. Wise words: Plug in some noise isolating headphones and listen to some great Bach? ? Try starting the Mac in safe mode (push power button, then hold down SHIFT), and see if it still happens. Safe mode will prevent any startup items from running.
Failing that, you could try resetting your PRAM. Disclaimer: I have never had to do this to my own MacBook Airs. Shutdown your MacBook Air. Push the MacBook Air’s power button. Hold down the Command-Option-P-R keys. For this to work, you must press this key combination before the grey screen appears.
Hold these keys until the computer restarts and you hear the startup sound for a second time. Let me know how you go.
Thanks, it works!! (for the time being), the noise was so loud that it was impossible to use the computer. It disappeared on its own, it started again.
Rang the Apple service, they told me a few other manoeuvres pressing several keys different from the simple one suggested by Chris. A couple of hours later, switched on again NO NOISE! I used the computer for a few hours, no problem. Next time I switched it on, terrible noise again. Tried what is suggested by Chris and it stopped straight out!!!!
Lets see if the noise starts again next time, and if the trick always works. Will let you know!!!! And many thank, many thanks. Thanks so much for this article! I had fan noise early on in my MacBook Air’s life and I’d disabled flash from running automatically in my browser, which had helped.
But over the last few months, the fan noise had been starting to come back. Last night, the fan just kept running at around 6500rpm regardless of how many applications I had open. I ran the Activity Monitor to see what were the CPU-hungry apps and java was using over 100% of CPU, which was weird – over 100%?!
I saw your article and decided to download and run Onyx. It detected that I needed to run Disk Utility to repair my HDD. So I did and now the fan noise has stopped.
I spoke too soon. Running Disk Utility to do a disk repair worked for a while but the problem returned.
I tried everything: SMC reset, downloaded latest Mac OS update, reduced the items to open at login to a minimum, NVRAM reset, turned off Time Machine auto back-ups, stopped using the smcFanControl app and more. I then discovered that the problem stops if I turn off wifi. I thought back to the Java load on my CPU and isolated the problem to running backups on CrashPlan, my cloud-based back-up service. If I run a CrashPlan back-up, the problem returns within minutes with the fan running at over 6000 rpm and the CPU temp at around 84 C. I went to the CrashPlan support forums and ended up downloading the latest Java release. This seems to have fixed the problem (fingers-crossed). I can still run CrashPlan backups and the fan is a little under 2000 rpm, the CPU temp at 65 C and the java CPU load is in the single digits.
Hi Tasman, FINALLY A SOLUTION!!! But a very mysterious one!
Almost a year ago, on May 16th 2012, I asked you about the problem of my MacBook Pro 13″ overheating, which happened following the update of Microsoft Outlook for Mac. We had several exchanges subsequently, also with many suggestions from kind people, but unfortunately none of them actually helped. Finally I have stumbled on a “solution” inadvertently. Our university wished for colleagues to use Outlook to share calendar information so I tried switching back from Apple Mail, and immediately the CPU activity increased drastically and the computer started to heat. But then I shared my Outlook calendar with a colleague and instantly the CPU activity dropped and for the past two weeks my CPU activity has been very low, and there has been no overheating! I informed the university computer section and the Apple dealer here, and they were glad to hear it but had not the slightest inkling as to why this should have solved the problem!
Best wishes, Ian. I have got a 2007 MacBook running Snow Leopard. I’ve read everything I could find regarding the fan issue, but nothing seems to address my problem.
My fan seeds have been reset in the bios by a tech to come on almost immediately at high speeds. (He did this to keep the machine cool after the logic board when out and he fixed it by remelting the solder around the video chip.
He is now unreachable). Now I can find no way to return the Mac to the original defaults.
No fan control program I’ve tried works because they seem to only allow for more cooling, not less. A SMC reset didn’t help.
Would anyone have ideas? Thanks for this amazingly helpful post. I found, with the help provided here, that a Samsung Mobile service was causing my 2011 13′ Macbook Air to overheat. It also drained my battery life, that is currently at 75%. The service was provided with my Galaxy Note, and it’s called Samsung Kies Wifi or something like that. If you have Kies on your computer, you may want to stop it on your Activity Monitor and uninstall Kies software. My cooler is running at 1/3 speed that was required when Kies was running, now that I removed it.
Thanks again for the help, and I hope if someone is having the same problem I had can fix it as well.
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