Coil whine is a common issue characterized by a high-pitched noise caused by the vibration of coils inside electronic components such as graphics cards, power supplies and motherboards. These coils are responsible for regulating the flow of electricity within the component. While coil whine is generally considered normal, it can be annoying for some users. Different models of certain products can produce higher or lower levels of coil whine on average. Graphics cards are the main culprits in modern gaming PCs, particularly AMD Radeon cards, particularly the higher-end ones that operate at higher power limits and GPU frequency.
In recent and current generation cards, coil whine has been most commonly observed to be louder in AMD Radeon 69XX and 79XX series models. Nvidia RTX cards are not immune to the issue but typically are less severe / audable. On the Nvidia side, again it's the higher clocking cards that are most commonly effected like the RTX4070 Ti Super. Less so on the RTX 4080 and 4090 even though they are higher performing as their performance comes from additional cores, and not just pushing the same number of cores harder with higher clock speeds and voltages.
Aside from just having a mostly enclosed chassis, keeping the side panel on and perhaps sitting the PC itself further away from where you sit at your desk, or below it, there are a couple of different methods to mitigating coil whine. We recommend trying both and spending a bit of time dialing in the numbers until you find what the best solution is for you and your setup.
The short answer is yes. Coil whine is a common issue that can occur in any electronic component that uses coils. It is not a fault or defect in the product, but rather a side effect of the way the component is designed and operates. While coil whine can be annoying, it does not affect the performance or reliability of the product. That being said, what is normal for one model or brand is not necessarily normal for another. Do a bit of homework and check out online reviews before making a purchase. If you are concerned about coil whine and want a system as quiet as possible, we strongly recommend going with an Nvidia solution. At least this is the case today at the time this article was written. If coil whine doesn't bother you, the RX 7XXX series are great value for money on the performance side, but if you want to avoid coil whine as much as possible, it's probably best you avoid the RX 79XX cards in particular.
Below are some examples of coil whine from current and recent generation GPUs.
Example One : 7900 XT (Youtube link) - Courtesy of Techtesters Dec 22.
Example Two : Several Previous Gen Cards (Youtube link) - Courtesy of optimum May 21.
Example Three : 7900XTX (Youtube link) - Courtesy of KitGuruTech May 23.
Particularly bad cases of coil whine can occur and when they do, they may be accepted by the manufacturer for warranty replacement. The bar at which this line is crossed is generally at the discretion of the manufacturer and evaluated on a case-by-case basis. For Nvidia cards, cases of bad coil whine in relatively new cards in our experience can be replaced under warranty. For AMD Radeon cards however, particularly RX79XX models like the 7900XT ,XTX and GRE, the manufacturers do not accept them back nor replace them as nearly as often as the higher levels of coil whine are generally considered normal for these particular models. This makes the bar much higher for determining what is and isn't a particularly bad case. If you think you might have a particularly bad case of coil whine, the best place to start is reaching out to the manufacturer's customer support team by email (MSI, Sapphire, Gigabyte, Asus, etc.) and asking them for advice on how to proceed. If they recommend a warranty return, provide the email to the retailer when you apply for RMA to help expedite the process.
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