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Noctua NF-F12 PWM chromax Fan

VSG

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The chromax series from Noctua is their answer to the many requests from customers wanting more color options beyond tan and brown, while retaining all the new technology from their R&D department. The NF-F12 PWM chromax is an all-black version of their NF-F12 fan thus, with six color options to choose from for corner pads and compatibility with other chromax accessories as well.

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The chromax part of the fan is impressive, though. Providing a black canvas for the end user to then customize to their desire, albeit within a range of colors, is as close as Noctua will come to adopting color-based customization that is not RGB. Many will appreciate this, no doubt, especially in combination with the other chromax family accessories Noctua has on offer.

In 2012, Corsair had colored plastic rings on fans. Now you can change the overall light of the fan with RGB controllers. It isn't exactly innovative to have corner color pads.
 
Hi, we're Noctua, we're so good we don't even have to try anymore.

Wrong...
 
Hi, we're Noctua, we're so good we don't even have to try anymore.

Wrong...

Eh, I mean, look at the Noctua P-series in this review, the fans specifically designed for Radiators. This is what Noctua says about the P-series: "Specifically designed for pressure demanding applications such as CPU or radiator cooling..."

The F & A series are designed more as all-around fans. I do think it's a bit strange that Noctua use an A-series fan for the 140mm Chromax and an F-series for the 120mm. I personally use a few 140mm Chromax in my rig, so I admit I probably have some bias(also don't use water cooling). In my case I tried out some cheaper arctic cooling fans, and before that the stock Phanatek fans that came with the case. The Phanatek's made an awful sound at 750rpm, the Arctic fans reverberated in my case anywhere past 750rpm. I gave up on both and went with Noctua's. I was happy when I found that they did not reverberate(inaudible at the 850rpm speed I keep them at idle), and are fairly unnoticeable at the 100%(1300rpm) when at load(the GPU gets a bit louder).

In my case, sound profile & vibration ended up being very important, and the Noctua's delivered on that.
 
Must be a sponsored review with some monetary pressure from Noctua.

Reviewing colored rubber pads? Really?
 
Must be a sponsored review with some monetary pressure from Noctua.

Reviewing colored rubber pads? Really?

Did you even read the review? It is of the entire fan and not rubber pads, and is the third of the Noctua series as mentioned in the very first paragraph.

This is most definitely not a sponsored review, and I take some umbrage to that insinuation.
 
These are good case fans, however not as good (silent & airflow) as the A12x25 though, except in price.
 
These results don't seem right - even when comparing different Noctua fans.
How do you measure airflow? Can you show the testing procedure?
 
These results don't seem right - even when comparing different Noctua fans.
How do you measure airflow? Can you show the testing procedure?

The test setup is linked in the review, and it is described here: https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/Darkside/Gentle_Typhoon_1450_Black_Edition/4.html

For what it is worth, this is the 4th different NF-F12 I have tested (regular and two iPPC versions), and all four tested similar (per RPM basis) on two different test setups.
 
The test setup is linked in the review, and it is described here: https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/Darkside/Gentle_Typhoon_1450_Black_Edition/4.html
OK - I missed this link. Now there's something to talk about.

Since you're just measuring airflow in an artificial situation, I don't really understand how you deducted this:
"The Noctua NF-F12, in whatever iteration you may find it, was not designed as a pressure-optimized fan."
Moreover this is incorrect:
"They have their NF-P and new NF-A series (for 120 mm fans) as pressure-optimized cooling solutions "
NF-F and NF-P are marketed as preasure-optimized. NF-A is an all-rounder.
Testing Noctua's claims would certainly be interesting, but it can't be done with your setup.

As for the methodology itself: you're measuring airflow in the middle of the exit, right?
This will affect your results. The tunnel is quite short and you can't assume the airflow is uniform at the exit.
The difference won't be huge in absolute terms, but even few % could seriously change how the ranking looks.

Measuring in multiple points would give a more accurate result and it can be done with an Arduino board and parts from an old printer. ;-)

Also there's just no way this:
"[setup] consists of a 1 m tall cylinder made out of acrylic (6" OD, 5.75" ID) with two flow straighteners inside out of a metal wire screen placed 50 mm and 100 mm from the exhaust"
describes this:
testing-6.jpg

the tunnel's length is ~4x the fan diameter.
 
Did you even read the review? It is of the entire fan and not rubber pads, and is the third of the Noctua series as mentioned in the very first paragraph.

This is most definitely not a sponsored review, and I take some umbrage to that insinuation.

Actually I didn't read the review, because as we both know, it's a 7 year old product.

I read it now though, pretty admitting. You didn't want to publish this review, but Noctua was nice enough to send these fans to you.
 
Actually I didn't read the review, because as we both know, it's a 7 year old product.

I read it now though, pretty admitting. You didn't want to publish this review, but Noctua was nice enough to send these fans to you.

It would be nice if you dropped the attitude towards VSG. If he says it's not sponsored - take that as truth. If you don't want to believe that and just throw smart-arse remarks towards him, why not find another forum? It's incredible how so many people throw shit, without any evidence or proof. And, FTR, he's not that complimentary about the fan in the review. Hardly sponsored.
 
Noctua's fans are of good quality but I still prefer Noiseblocker's. They look the part too.
 
Tried the brown version a few a years ago with the U12S (it's the default fan included with that cooler).

Was Silent at low RPMs, but the the cooling performance was below average.
Which become better after 60% (1000 RPM), but then it also had annoying motor noise, sounded like a mini jet engine - seriously, it was noisy af.

From Noctua I expected better, especially for that price. The NB B12 Eloops or even cheaper fans like the Akasa Apache (for half the price...) are offering better value than this.
Overall I liked the U12S, but this fan was a major disappointment.
 
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You lack of eloop here - I think that one could really make all the graphs look more interesting...
 
Tried the brown version a few a years ago with the U12S (it's the default fan included with that cooler).

Was Silent at low RPMs, but the the cooling performance was below average.
Which become better after 60% (1000 RPM), but then it also had annoying motor noise, sounded like a mini jet engine - seriously, it was noisy af.

From Noctua I expected better, especially for that price. The NB B12 Eloops or even cheaper fans like the Akasa Apache (for half the price...) are offering better value than this.
Overall I liked the U12S, but this fan was a major disappointment.

I got that cooler in a different pc (4790k VR machine) along with the Noctua NF A12x25 PWM and that's a golden combo, silent yet powerful.
 
You lack of eloop here - I think that one could really make all the graphs look more interesting...

I have one of them here, but that model didn't go as low in fan speed and is only reflected in the 1250 and 1500 RPM charts.
 
Power consumption here would be great. While the NF-F12 is weaker in mm h2o and much weaker in noise than the a12x25, it uses 3 times less power than it full power. If you have things that require fans then the nf-f12 is the best there is because of its low power consumption, the a12x25 is for builds that you have to put close to your ears, for anything else, nf-f12.
 
just dunno, still like $2 fan with RGB pads :D
 
Eh, I mean, look at the Noctua P-series in this review, the fans specifically designed for Radiators. This is what Noctua says about the P-series: "Specifically designed for pressure demanding applications such as CPU or radiator cooling..."

The F & A series are designed more as all-around fans. I do think it's a bit strange that Noctua use an A-series fan for the 140mm Chromax and an F-series for the 120mm. I personally use a few 140mm Chromax in my rig, so I admit I probably have some bias(also don't use water cooling). In my case I tried out some cheaper arctic cooling fans, and before that the stock Phanatek fans that came with the case. The Phanatek's made an awful sound at 750rpm, the Arctic fans reverberated in my case anywhere past 750rpm. I gave up on both and went with Noctua's. I was happy when I found that they did not reverberate(inaudible at the 850rpm speed I keep them at idle), and are fairly unnoticeable at the 100%(1300rpm) when at load(the GPU gets a bit louder).

In my case, sound profile & vibration ended up being very important, and the Noctua's delivered on that.

Noctua them self say it's the nf f12 that is best for radiators https://noctua.at/en/which_fan_is_right_for_me
 
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