Kent Schumacher wrote:
> 
> HOEFFNER at dcmir.med.umn.edu wrote:
> >
> > Hi
> >
> > Weird hardware type question. We bought 3 Dell machines with winders on them
> > and then installed RH6.2 about 3/4 year ago. A couple of months ago some people
> > started complaining about a high pitched whistle/whine/not sure how to describe
> > it coming from one of them in Linux. Then, I couldn't hear it, but this last
> > week or so I can (it's pretty loud and quite annoying). It only happens on this
> > one machine and only when it kicks into graphics mode. It doesn't do it in
> > windows at all. The other machines don't do it either. I had someone else
> > install RH on these machines, but they should all have the same driver.
> >
> > Is there anything I can do about this? Since it's only in RH, which Dell
> > refused to install, it would seem I'm SOL when it comes to turning to them.
> >
> > Any advice appreciated.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> >
> A high pitched whine in a monitor is almost always a capacitor pushed past
> it's current design limits (capacitors seem to degrade with age).  My guess
> is that linux is running the monitor at a higher refresh rate.  You can
> confirm this if your monitor has an on screen display that reports
> refresh rates.
> 
> If this is the case, you can modify or insert (or uncomment) a modeline in
> XF86Config that has a lower refresh rate.
> 
> As a reality check, you could press [ctrl][alt]+ or [ctrl][alt]-.  If your
> XF86Config has multiple resolutions enabled, your screen resolution will change
> when you press those key combinations.  My guess is the whine will get worse
> or better.

I just read Dave Sherohman's post, and I think his guess about the flyback transformer
is more likely than mine.

Kent