OK I'm happy to leave this here knowing your negative bias towards these fans is based primarily on feedback from retail stores rather then actual trusted technical review sites.
And what does Reddit sell? What does Overclock.net sell? Since when have they been retail sites?
I don't need a technical site full of technical experts to technically explain to me in a very technical manner the technical reasons why stuff arriving broken is technically not good, whichever way you look at it...
As for "negative bias" - I have nothing against the Arctics. Just against the people who are trying to slate Noctuas over some unsubstantiated claims.
In truth, I'd not use either of them for my current build... which is why I don't.
That you would snobbishly dismiss someone's review purely because it's not on a 'trusted technical review site' is more telling of your own biasses...
You're not stupid, you know full well the typical purchaser leaving feedback on a retail site will be reporting issues including damages in transit (broken or damaged frames / blades)
I've not heard of it happening with any other fan, though. I tend to order 12-18 fans at a time and not once had any of them arrive busted or DOA, nor seen it mentioned in any user reviews.
So when I was considering trying them out and saw several different users report this with the Arctics, it stood out.
and that they probably won't have the techcical knowledge to identify whether perceived noise is actually a fan or a mounting issue, or even how to control fan speed.
Again, that's quite a snobbish assumption on your part, given that several technically versed members on here also buy through retail sites... As is, several of the other reviews speak of altering fan speeds in BIOS vs software, some while overclocking, so I would presume they at least have some idea what they're doing.
You know very well that you can find the exact same issues you are assigning to the Arctic fans reported on any other manufacturers fans if you look hard enough
Never heard of any other fans arriving broken or DoA like that...
seriously that review of the Noctua fan I posted was the first negative review I read on Amazon.
Yeah, I saw the page. It seems to be the
only negative one, too...
You have your own reasons for disliking the Arctic fans but I don't think it's fair to warn other people off them when you have no personal or technical reason to do so other than hearsay.
I'm not warning people off them.
I'm merely giving my reasons why I'm not sold on them, along with taking the **** out of EssaT's repetitive puppy rants and challenging his unsubstantiated assertions.
Those first versions of Scythe Ninja are/were exceptionally low impedance heatsinks certainly working with any fan.
And when tested against a bunch of other fans, the Noctuas did very well despite your predictions.
What is your point?
Case with typical filters, stamped meshes and indirect noise escape paths has likely more impedance.
And so other such fans will also drop in accordance with that impedence, as proven by your article.
So what is your point?
So far, all we've got is that Noctua fans are the worst ever, because they behave like every other fan does... and several articles to prove so.
Good fans avoid design creating frequency spikes in the first place
The spikes are created by having struts to hold the fan propeller. Every fan does this. It's the same reason why helicopter rotors make noise.
This is your cue to post some fans which do not create any frequency spikes...
SPCR started noise spectrum measurements in fan reviews and spiky frequency response corresponds well with perceived sound being worser
Which is exactly what your Noctuer link said, whereupon they then explainer how they
reducer this.
And it's precisely those NF-F12's "stator guide vanes" parallel with blade trailing edge, which create frequency spikes by disturbing airflow at complete length of trailing edge at once!
But they're not parallel... That's the whole idea of variable angle vanes as an acoustic control method.
This, along with Noctua's vortex shedding methods, is even supported by the SPCR article you linked to... The very things you're accusing Noctua of are utterly disproven by the supporting links you post!
Now take a note at which angle NF-A12's motor support struts intersect blade trailing edge...
As complete reversal at 90 degree angle instead of being parallel.
If NF-F12's design was such good, why such complete change of fan design?
NF-F12 is designed to reduce turbulent airflow and is purely about forcing air through a space as straight as possible.
The A12 is more of an all-rounder, using different designs for a different application.
I'm starting to wonder if you ever actually read the articles you post... and whether you'd actually read something if I posted it for you:
https://noctua.at/en/nf-a12x25-interview-lars-stromback
If you do ever read that, I look forward to hearing what you misinterpret from it...!