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- 23 Aug 2010
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Most times on this forum there seems to be a push for the Arctic P12 fans vs any other.
Here's a comparison
Here's a comparison
I just received the P14s today to replace some (very old) Noctua 120mm fans that I had re-used from my old system.
I can't comment on noise comparison as these are 140mm vs 120mm, but on build quality the Noctua fans are so much better. From the vibration pads to wiring sleeves, it looks like a well engineered product. Looking at the fans compared, if installing on a case/radiator I would go for whichever of the two, however if installing on a cooler I'd go for the Noctua as it has anti-vibration padding. Fans on CPU coolers are loosely installed, so there can be some vibration noise where those pads would be useful, but for case mounting where the fans are rigidly attached, not so much.
I have also had exemplary customer service from Noctua (once in 2009 when I struggled to install my cooler, and once last month, when I ordered an AM4 mounting kit for the same cooler I got back in 2009!), so would rather spend my money on them, however on this occasion went for the Arctic's due to availability.
TBH I can't tell the quality of the fan given they are on radiators. Don't need the vibration pads either (have tried them on air coolers too). If someone wants to spend 20-30 on a fan because it "feels" better that is obviously up to them.
I use a fan without vibration pads for my CPU cooler and have the anti-vibration 'strips' for that and it's fine. I won't install a second fan as when I tried it I sometimes got an audible noise from the vibration contact to the cooler. So, if I were buying another fan for my CPU cooler, I'd get one with vibration pads.
You don't have to spend £30.... you can get Noctua fans for £14, which is still double the amount of the Arctic one, but like I said, depends on application. Note that the reviewer pointed out that the Noctua had no motor noise, whereas the Arctic did at 1,000RPM.
I know, like I said I bought these fans! For the price they are extremely good.It was only at 1000 rpm though, higher or lower and it went away, easily enough avoided on a setup.
While you can get a Noctua for £14, they (Noctua Redux) don't come with the anti-vibration mounts, Low Noise Adapters and other parts that make it feel like a "premium" product.You don't have to spend £30.... you can get Noctua fans for £14, which is still double the amount of the Arctic one
Fair enough on the price, didn't spot the lack of vibration mounts.While you can get a Noctua for £14, they (Noctua Redux) don't come with the anti-vibration mounts, Low Noise Adapters and other parts that make it feel like a "premium" product.
The Noctua NF-A12x25 in the above youtube video is £30 vs a £6 Arctic P12 PWM PST ...
The Arctic's have a 10 year warranty vs 6 for the Noctua.
My basket at Overclockers UK:
- 1 x Arctic Cooling P12 PWM PST Black Fan - 120mm= £5.95
- 1 x Noctua NF-P12 Redux 1700rpm PWM Fan - 120mm= £12.95
- 1 x Noctua NF-A12x25 PWM Fan - 120mm= £29.99
Any reason why he's matching noise levels, rather than rpm to measure performance?
Any reason why he's matching noise levels, rather than rpm to measure performance?
Good fans don't vibrate much.From the vibration pads to wiring sleeves, it looks like a well engineered product. Looking at the fans compared, if installing on a case/radiator I would go for whichever of the two, however if installing on a cooler I'd go for the Noctua as it has anti-vibration padding. Fans on CPU coolers are loosely installed, so there can be some vibration noise where those pads would be useful, but for case mounting where the fans are rigidly attached, not so much.
If noise isn't concern, you shouldn't be looking at Noctuas at all but Deltas.Any reason why he's matching noise levels, rather than rpm to measure performance?
not sure if true. the NF P12 is terrible in comparison to the newer (and cheaper) fans- The Noctua's have better build quality overall, and from my own experience exemplary customer service, which to me, coupled with the slight performance advantage, justifies the price.
Good fans don't vibrate much.
Something Noctua didn't master while focusing on marketing instead of actual product engineering.
I've had both NF-P12 and NF-F12 come with heatsinks and in vibration those are absolutely the way worst fans I've touched in 20 years PC has had fans.
At least NF-P12 has OK good noise profile, but NF-F12's marketing geometry gives it restless noise profile with sharp spikes in it.
And you're completely wrong about case and fan vibration.
If you care about noise, vibrating fans are the worst thing to add into case:
Case is made of really big thin metal sheets, which lack rigidity to resist vibration and start acting as loudspeaker diaphgram when exposed to vibration.
That vibration amplified by case has always been the biggest noise source in mechanical HDDs.
Hence soft HDD mounting is all above budget level cases in last dozen+ years.
And fan isn't any different if it's badly vibrating.
(maybe Noctua finally copied also motor besides main blade geometry from Gentle Typhoon)
I just returned a whole set of P12's - they're decent but they don't handle low RPM well and make a weird modulating sound. It's not "smooth".
I guess it's fine for normal air case build but if you run custom water and want to run silent PC with low RPM, spend a bit extra on something better.
got 8 of them in my case without any issue. Guessing your rads were vibrating on something.
No, they didn't, because that would further skew the results. For example, the ML120s on his list will do 2400rpm and cool much better than a maxed out Arctic.I would guess that a lot of people will prefer to find a volume that they're happy to use, rather than an RPM. Only skipped through the results, but did they do a max RPM test, just to see what could cool the most, for those with headphones etc.
But highly subjective and dependent upon the specific components used in each individual case, so not really an accurate or particularly useful measure.noise is a major factor for people.
Is that what MartinsLiquidLab says to do, yeh? Because fans are like car engine noises, yeh?If noise isn't concern, you shouldn't be looking at Noctuas at all but Deltas.
It depends on the rad thickness and fins per inch. Different fans work better with different rads. The modulating sound is stalled airflow causing back pressure which is forced to leak out the sides of the intake fans. I got that on my high FPI XSPC rads, but it vanished when I switched to low FPI Alphacool ones. You can also swap from Push to Pull, but that sometimes has an inverted form of the same stall effect.Like I said it's only when you spin them to very low rpm. Changed them for phanteks and no issue there.
Maybe a dodgy batch... although it has been mentioned before so is clearly a thing with these.