F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The new motherboard is generating a persistent electronic buzzing sound when connected to the monitor.

The new motherboard is generating a persistent electronic buzzing sound when connected to the monitor.

The new motherboard is generating a persistent electronic buzzing sound when connected to the monitor.

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tangamos
Junior Member
33
01-19-2025, 07:56 PM
#1
You've just upgraded your system with a new motherboard, processor, and RAM. The monitor is now producing a low-frequency buzzing sound, which seems to stop when you disconnect the HDMI cables from either the graphics card or the monitor. This could be related to power delivery issues, cable connections, or driver problems. Check the power supply and ensure all connections are secure. Also, verify that your graphics card drivers are up to date.
T
tangamos
01-19-2025, 07:56 PM #1

You've just upgraded your system with a new motherboard, processor, and RAM. The monitor is now producing a low-frequency buzzing sound, which seems to stop when you disconnect the HDMI cables from either the graphics card or the monitor. This could be related to power delivery issues, cable connections, or driver problems. Check the power supply and ensure all connections are secure. Also, verify that your graphics card drivers are up to date.

K
kam360
Junior Member
4
01-20-2025, 12:38 AM
#2
Earlier I might have mentioned a coil whine issue and thought it wasn’t a big deal. I learned how it functions once more, but recently someone clarified my previous idea was incorrect. The new explanation suggests it could still be related to coil whine, though it implies the monitor’s coil might be gradually deteriorating. This might not affect performance at all.
K
kam360
01-20-2025, 12:38 AM #2

Earlier I might have mentioned a coil whine issue and thought it wasn’t a big deal. I learned how it functions once more, but recently someone clarified my previous idea was incorrect. The new explanation suggests it could still be related to coil whine, though it implies the monitor’s coil might be gradually deteriorating. This might not affect performance at all.

D
DehOnlyOwl
Member
64
01-21-2025, 05:44 AM
#3
Click the speaker icon in the system tray, navigate to Sound Settings, select "Sound Control Panel" from the related options, and turn off Nvidia audio devices. Or, check Device Manager for NVIDIA High Definition Audio and the Virtual Audio Device under Sound, Video, and Game controllers. If your monitor isn’t connected to the motherboard, the problem likely isn’t with the board itself unless there’s power leakage through the PCIe slot affecting the speakers. If the monitor has no speakers, the issue probably doesn’t exist. You might also try turning off the monitor’s volume.
D
DehOnlyOwl
01-21-2025, 05:44 AM #3

Click the speaker icon in the system tray, navigate to Sound Settings, select "Sound Control Panel" from the related options, and turn off Nvidia audio devices. Or, check Device Manager for NVIDIA High Definition Audio and the Virtual Audio Device under Sound, Video, and Game controllers. If your monitor isn’t connected to the motherboard, the problem likely isn’t with the board itself unless there’s power leakage through the PCIe slot affecting the speakers. If the monitor has no speakers, the issue probably doesn’t exist. You might also try turning off the monitor’s volume.

C
Cra123
Senior Member
251
01-25-2025, 04:36 PM
#4
I considered that too. The issue appears to be connected to electricity, though I’m still unsure about how swapping components affected it.
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Cra123
01-25-2025, 04:36 PM #4

I considered that too. The issue appears to be connected to electricity, though I’m still unsure about how swapping components affected it.

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Master_Fid
Junior Member
39
01-25-2025, 10:30 PM
#5
I assume you meant to confirm the source isn't the speakers? The nature of sound being analog means things shift when moving from digital to analog, often significantly. If sound appears from a speaker even when it's unpowered, it might be a speaker wire inside the device experiencing crosstalk from another component that activates only when that plug is connected.
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Master_Fid
01-25-2025, 10:30 PM #5

I assume you meant to confirm the source isn't the speakers? The nature of sound being analog means things shift when moving from digital to analog, often significantly. If sound appears from a speaker even when it's unpowered, it might be a speaker wire inside the device experiencing crosstalk from another component that activates only when that plug is connected.