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Ubuntu fan speed
Ubuntu fan speed












ubuntu fan speed ubuntu fan speed

Note down the access rights for /etc/X11. Installed the 313.30 (or similar drivers)? No nf file? No Problem. You also have to set PowerMizer to 'Prefer Maximum Performance'. You must go into the NVidia X Server after every restart and set the Thermal Settings.

ubuntu fan speed

I suggest you keep the temps below 70☌ if possible.

ubuntu fan speed

You can also see the GPU temperature from there. Once you do this you can directly control the fan speed by sliding the slide bar. On the left hand side, under your GPU, ' GPU 0 - (GeForce GTX 570)' for example, you should see a Thermal Settings entry.Ĭlick on it, scroll down, and accept the agreement. Restart the system and open NVIDIA X Server. Note that you will need a cable plugged into each GPU for this to work (or tell the system to think that the cards are plugged in). If there is more than one device, "Device1", "Device2", then you will need to add Option "Coolbits" "4" to each section. This solution has worked for me on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Elementary OS, and LXLE on a Dell Inspiron 15R 5520 laptop.The following also works for Ubuntu 12.04 and 13.04Īfter installing the NVidia drivers, you can facilitate fan controlled cooling by adding Coolbits.Ĭoolbits is basically an optional NVIDIA X Server component that adds a slide bar to control GPU fan speed.Įdit /etc/X11/nf, by pressing Alt+F2 and typing gksu gedit /etc/X11/nfĪdd Option "Coolbits" "4" under the Device section, and save the file. Once you turn your computer back on and select the linux operating system whose grub file you edited earlier, your fans should be working normally. Shut it down completely, so don't "restart" it.

  • Enter your login password and press ENTER (the password will not be displayed as you type it)Ĭlick "Save", wait a few moments for the file to save, then close the text editor.įinally, shut down your computer.
  • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=!Windows 2012". In the grub configuration file found at /etc/default/grub so that it reads GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" Here is my solution for getting my fan speeds back to normal, from another thread:įan speed is normalized by editing the line Sounds like you have the opposite issue with fan speed to what I had.














    Ubuntu fan speed