Silence is golden!

Big coolers and slow fans. The larger the area of heat exchange the better. Water cooling could work but they need pumps which provide another source of noise.
 
I've just built myself a whisper quiet PC using a Fractal Design R5 (MSI GTX970 and Noctua CPU cooler the D15 one). Sound damped and comes with good silent fans. Really great case to work with. It's on the desk next to me and I can't hear it at alland I've got 4 instances of Eve Online running. Not sure they do them on here though they didn't when I asked them a few months back.
 
Get a case designed for silence (I have the NZXT H440), combined with controllable fans for both the case and the CPU cooler - I use fanxpert to have all my case fans running around 600rpm at idle, increasing gradually with cpu temp increases. My 6 year old Zalman CNPS Xtreme cpu cooler which I've somehow not replaced through 3 different builds since then, comes with it's own fan controller, and fanxpert is showing a reading of roughly 850rpm at all times (though I can hear the bearings in it now sadly, might be time to replace soon).
Also grab a GPU that has a fanless mode at idle, and a PSU that has a low-load fanless function too. I'm currently using OcUK's Infinity 970 with a Superflower Leadex 850w PSU.
I have never had a PC this silent in my entire life, and it's the most powerful system I've ever had too, really amazing stuff! My sound meter gives a reading of 27-28dba in my room with my pc at the desktop and measured from my head level, and I'm sat where my knee can actually touch my case if I move it to the right a bit :)
 
Pretty simple these days, like someone posted above - just use large fans at low RPM. My PC is basically silent and running a D14.
 
Quiet fans that perform well are important too. The silence designed cases should come with good quiet fans (would be silly not to). I suggest fans like the Aerocool DS (Dead silence) range. Reviews look good, saying that the fans are very quiet, even on 100%.

Also agree on the fanless mode graphics cards. I know the MSI Twin Frozr and Asus Strix cards have fanless modes. But I've also heard cards like the Gigabyte G1 are generally quiet too and according to LinusTechTips any GTX900 series card can have fanless mode. Might require a bios flash though.

Incidentally OCUK, seem to be running out on stock on those Aerocool DS fans and they seem to be taking a while to replenish. Any OCUK employees can shed some light on this? Are they not being sold anymore?
 
Also do not underestimate a decent PSU. Even cheaper decent ones can make a heck of a racket. For instance, I have a corsair builder CX500w in a MITX PC and its the loudest thing in there.

It all depends on what you want from a machine? If its full out mad gaming/video editing/whatever then you will need water, decent fans and preferably a fan controller.

Or you could go for something like an AMD Athlon 5350, in mitx, passively cooled with a sfx psu for general pc duties/HTPC etc.
 
Big coolers and slow fans. The larger the area of heat exchange the better. Water cooling could work but they need pumps which provide another source of noise.

The radiators also need fans, so unless you put it in another room you still have noise issues.

In my experience a few large fans rotating slowly > a large number of small fans buzzing around. Stock heatsink fans are noisy, or the last I heard was. Also get a fan speed controller and dial them down. Some cpu coolers are just plain noisy the H100 for instance, once its stock fans ramp up they're more than a little distracting, some of the big air coolers are quieter, Be Quiet or Noctua.
 
The bigger the fan the less noise it tends to make. Noctua tend to make some really good quiet fans if you can afford them. The only somewhat difficult part is researching on GPUs and PSU's and how much noise they make. Some PSU's have fans that only turn on when needed so that may be ideal.

GPU's are a bit more difficult since they always tend to have somewhat small fans but just looking at review sites will tell you how much noise they output.

A decent case built for silence will muffle a good amount of sound although you have to sacrifice temps for ones that are dampened.
 
A decent fan controller/fan curve is a must too, avoids the fans ramping up too much of their own/motherboards accord
 
And to add some quantification to this, if fan speeds can be kept below 1000 rpm, that tends to be a bit of a cut off point for being audible. Or let's say 800-1000, as a reasonable window to aim for as a maximum. In my new BeQuiet 800 case I've got eight fans going at all times*, with a further four on the twin 970s only firing up when needed, but due to the low RPMs it's basically silent.

Some motherboards will have PWM-enabled fan headers by default, so look out for those as it basically means a similarly PWM-enabled fan will be able to spin at lower RPMs.

Another mildly related point as that you'll *generally* want more air being pulled in to the case than pushed out, too, so you maintain a net positive air pressure in there and limit the amount of dust that can get sucked in through all the tiny gaps. And have dust filters in front of all the intake fans, which higher end cases will come with by default.

*precisely:
1x BeQuiet 850w PSU doing whatever it does standard
2x 120mm front intake @ 700rpm
1x 92mm base intake @ 1000rpm (PSU means this is as large as will fit, and it's only present to try maintain positive pressure)
1x 140mm + 1x 120mm on NH-D15 cooler @ 700rpm (the nice looking but annoying case side panel widget meant one of the stock 140mm wouldn't fit and had to be swapped)
1x 140mm top exhaust @ 700rpm
1x 120mm rear exhaust @ 1000rpm
 
I've just built myself a whisper quiet PC using a Fractal Design R5 (MSI GTX970 and Noctua CPU cooler the D15 one). Sound damped and comes with good silent fans. Really great case to work with. It's on the desk next to me and I can't hear it at alland I've got 4 instances of Eve Online running. Not sure they do them on here though they didn't when I asked them a few months back.

i found the silent series r2 to tick really loudly. I ended up swapping them out for noctua nf a14 and running them at like 500-600 rpm on a fan controller, has improved temps and lowered noise
 
I replaced the fans in my Define R4 with NF-A14s too. They're really quiet running at 5V off the fan controller, although they won't actually start up at that voltage, so I need to flick it up to 7V when I power on.
 
I replaced the fans in my Define R4 with NF-A14s too. They're really quiet running at 5V off the fan controller, although they won't actually start up at that voltage, so I need to flick it up to 7V when I power on.

Yeah i have that problem, quite annoying. I just got my lamptron fc5 v2 and already considering selling it and getting the v3 because it has an automatic 12v start boost before dropping to your selected speed. So you don't have to do it manually.
One of my fractal fans failed after like 2 months and started to sound like a car Engine. Don't understand why people say these fans are good, all mine ticked or failed
 
The bigger the fan the less noise it tends to make. Noctua tend to make some really good quiet fans if you can afford them. The only somewhat difficult part is researching on GPUs and PSU's and how much noise they make. Some PSU's have fans that only turn on when needed so that may be ideal.

GPU's are a bit more difficult since they always tend to have somewhat small fans but just looking at review sites will tell you how much noise they output.

A decent case built for silence will muffle a good amount of sound although you have to sacrifice temps for ones that are dampened.

Yep the only gpus that are quiet are the msi 4g 970. Its fans don't come on till 50deg and it has nice 100mm fans instead of the little ones that make loads of noise. My gpu fan is the only thing i can hear at idle. But you can use a bios edit tool to allow 0% fan speed. You just risk bricking your card / voiding warranty, so i havent bothered
 
i found the silent series r2 to tick really loudly. I ended up swapping them out for noctua nf a14 and running them at like 500-600 rpm on a fan controller, has improved temps and lowered noise

Odd.. I have 3 of them in my Air 540 and they are brilliant! And FREE to me.. ;)
 
Depends on the machine, if you just want to run a stock i7 and a high end GPU then you can get away with a D5 pump (lowered to an inaudible setting) a couple of de-pumped and snorkeled Zalman reserators and a fanless PSU, job done.
 
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