
At the same time, the menubar icon can be customized to display the temperature and fan speed of one component, the icon, temperature or fan speed only. The light and discreet smcFanControl runs in the background and can be accessed via its status bar menu. Check the status of all your Mac’s fans and components via the intuitive status bar menu This feature prevents your from making accidental changes and damage your machine. The great thing about smcFanControl, is that you cannot set a minimum speed below Apple’s default values.

By increasing the minimum fan speed, you can make your Mac run cooler in normal usage conditions.
#SMC FAN CONTROL SETTINGS FOR MAC PRO MAC OS X#
Smc Fan Control is a practical and user-friendly Mac OS X utility that enables you to easily set a minimum speed for your Mac’s built-in fans. Manually adjust the fan speed of your Mac and reduce the system temperature Thanks to smcFanControl you can now keep your Mac cool and reduce the overall system temperature before it becomes unbearable. If any of you knows a way to effectively control fan speed on the mac pro, please let me know.MacBooks and MacBook Pros are powerful and versatile laptops that can help you perform a wide variety of task but, at the same time, can warm up very fast, especially when running demanding processes and tasks. Resetting teh SMC also seems to have reduced the tempearture of the air mesured at the exhaust – at equivalent fan speeds and system load (that is: idle!). :’(įrom what I undrestand the fans are controlled by a chip called “SMC” as in “System Management Controller” and apple doesn’t give you much control over it, apart from a clunky procedure to reset it! Note: resetting the SMC allowed me to get back to original rpms for all fans after FanControl had messed them up.
#SMC FAN CONTROL SETTINGS FOR MAC PRO PRO#
It probably works on other apple computers but on the mac pro 2009 it has absolutely no effect on fan speed. Worse: it doesn’t actually do anything on the mac pro. However, again two of them cannot be set lower than 1000 rpm.

That one has the advantage of allowing settings for all 5 fans on the mac pro. Up from 600 rpm, that is too much! I wish I could run every fan at 850 rpm! Because it’s designed for the macbook pro (yes, the laptop), it only controls 2 of the 5 fans and the minimum speed it allows is 1000 rpms. BEWARE: it’s a pain to uninstall (unsinstall instrutions on their page). I first tried FanControl from Lobotomo Software. Now my problem is I’d like all these fans to run faster! Yes, faster! Not because I want some extra fan noise, but because I believe Uncle Steve pushed it too far when he asked his engineers to reduce the fan noise! I wouldn’t mind the noise to be a little bit higher pitched than it currently is. You can monitor that with iStat menus – which is very cool for monitoring a lot of things, except voltages & power consumption which do not seem to work, at least on the Mac pro 2009. Did you know there were actually 5 different fans inside a Mac Pro (early 2009 version)? They are named Intake, Exhaust, BoostA, PCI and Power Supply! By default, all of them turn pretty slowly in the 600 to 850 rpm range! Which makes the whole thing pretty silent… yet… anoying because of the complexity of the sound (yes, it’s 5 different spining motor sounds combined, not to mention the hard drive spinning!)
