How to build the ultimate silent PC

If software fan control isn't doing the trick – some fans simply ignore the signals the system sends them – then a spot of extra hardware might do the trick. A fan controller gizmo goes for as little as £3 (try overclockers.co.uk), though you'll need to fork out more if you want to puppeteer multiple fans.

Simply plug your fan(s) into the controller, then the controller's own cable into the motherboard's fan connectors, then spinning a pleasingly eighties-style dial gets you your noise reduction. Turning a dial down reduces the power supplied to the fan, so it can't spin as fast: it's as simple as that. Conversely, if your system's running too hot, just spin 'em up a bit. You can even make this slightly ungainly setup into something of a virtue by picking up a front-mounted panel that slides into an empty optical drive bay. If there's one thing to make your PC look more powerful than it is, it's an array of dials and twinkly LEDs on the front of it.