An update on the chirping/buzzing corsair VX450W PSU's.
I turned off C3/C6/C7 states and EIST in bios as suggested by some of the previous links and the chirping/buzzing sound goes away.
So the problem appears to be some strange interaction between the intel powersaving features and the PSU when the CPU is in some low power state. So while there is workaround, I'm not entirely happy with the solution. The Intel C3/C6 states allow the cores to go into a lower power state or shutdown most of the unused cores. EIST allows additional powersavings by lowering the clock frequency, and thus power used, by the idling cores. There's several effects:
- The processor cores are running at full speed all the time.
- The processor is drawing a near constant amount of power from the PSU (on lavalys, it shows the current is constantly up). The varying load switching from the different C0 running and Cx idle states appears to be what's causing the PSU buzz/whine/chirp.
- The turbo-boost is also affected. The cores will no longer boost higher than when Cx/EIST is on if other cores are unused since the other cores are at "full speed" even if they are not being used since the extra turbo boost turns on if other cores are at non-zero Cx (C3/C6) states.
- Additional power consumed while core is idling at full speed.
- Additional power means additional heat generated.
- Additional heat means system cooling may need to work harder to cool the system.
- Additional cooling requirement may cause the fans to speed up possibly increasing system noise.
I measured some systems with/without C3/C6 and EIST and the additional power consumption at idle when those are turned off are:
i7/920 (quad core) --> +20W at idle when C3/C6 and EIST turned off
i3/530 (dual core) --> +7W at idle when C3/C6 and EIST turned off
I did not measure the i7/860 connected to the VX but it would probably come in at +15-20W additional at idle. At +20W, assuming the PC is on all the time and mostly "idle," this would result in additional ~175KW/h consumption per year (or $49/year additional at tier 3 pge rates).
(PS-I bought an enermax ECO80+ PSU for a possible replacement but I had to return it since the fan wasn't spinning, also it looks like the cables may not be long enough to route them through the back).