Macs Fan Control is probably the best application out there that helps with the cooling of my MacBook Pro. But I was wondering if you can implement a way to put profiles in, so that if I wanted to, I could click a profile that says "Rendering" and it would set the RPM and it would stay at that RPM until I go back and click the controlled preference.
EDIT: Also, is there a way to set the min RPM above the minimum? So instead of 2000 for the MBP, I could set it to 2300 RPM.
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Feature Request: Fan Profiles
Moderator: Steven
- Steven
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
Hi,
Thanks, yes! This is number one feature to be done soon.
Thanks, yes! This is number one feature to be done soon.
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
Scheduled for 1.2 version
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
In progress
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
Sorry, scheduled for 2.0 version
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
Nice idea for further improvement: app-based profiles that switch automatically when certain apps run
Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
I find that multiple profile are a nice idea. App based profile are useful but the usage of some app has a very changing load for the cpu (eg Photoshop). So I suggest to implement manual profile in order to let the user set the RPM.
Three profile are enough: default, medium and high. The RPM for each can be modified from the user.
Finally the user change the current profile by left-clicking on the menu bar icon-> profiles-> and then he get it
Another suggestion (that is OT i knew) is to remove the C or the F letter from the menu bar. The menu bar even if you have a 27' iMac, it is short. So I think that deleting that letter it wont be confusing.
And the last I promise, the temperature font size could be bigger, just a little be
Thanks a lot for the must to have app
Three profile are enough: default, medium and high. The RPM for each can be modified from the user.
Finally the user change the current profile by left-clicking on the menu bar icon-> profiles-> and then he get it
Another suggestion (that is OT i knew) is to remove the C or the F letter from the menu bar. The menu bar even if you have a 27' iMac, it is short. So I think that deleting that letter it wont be confusing.
And the last I promise, the temperature font size could be bigger, just a little be
Thanks a lot for the must to have app
not in Nottingham
Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
+1Steven wrote:Nice idea for further improvement: app-based profiles that switch automatically when certain apps run
currently I use program Palua, which switches Function keys to Function or Normal brightness/volume mode depending on program running. Thus on Terminal, VNC or RDP I always have Function keys without need to press Fn.
Also I noticed that there are GPU or CPU hungry programs, detecting which could prevent from Temp rise before fans actually goes up.
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Re: Feature Request: Fan Profiles
I Would love to see both app-based and manual profiles as I (and most likely some other people) have a need for both (Using a 2010 12-Core Mac Pro)
In OSX, I do music production and would rather have the fans increase RPM only when crucial to reduce background noise when possible, and to keep the tower quiet for light use, so I think an always-on fan manual profile (with a graph based approach similar to overclocking Windows apps like MSI afterburner) would work here. I haven't encountered overheating issues yet, but I do feel the default apple profile takes longer to kick in and would rather start more aggressive cooling at a lower temp to keep my computer's parts from failing over the long run.
In Windows, I do some gaming and would rather an app-triggered profile (again with a graph, but not as necessary here) to run when certain always-intensive games are executed. Again, this machine helps pay the bills and would like to keep in running strong for longer (plus I live in the Tropics, room not always A/C) so cooler temps are key.
In OSX, I do music production and would rather have the fans increase RPM only when crucial to reduce background noise when possible, and to keep the tower quiet for light use, so I think an always-on fan manual profile (with a graph based approach similar to overclocking Windows apps like MSI afterburner) would work here. I haven't encountered overheating issues yet, but I do feel the default apple profile takes longer to kick in and would rather start more aggressive cooling at a lower temp to keep my computer's parts from failing over the long run.
In Windows, I do some gaming and would rather an app-triggered profile (again with a graph, but not as necessary here) to run when certain always-intensive games are executed. Again, this machine helps pay the bills and would like to keep in running strong for longer (plus I live in the Tropics, room not always A/C) so cooler temps are key.