- Joined
- Jun 24, 2015
- Messages
- 8,124 (2.37/day)
- Location
- Western Canada
System Name | ab┃ob |
---|---|
Processor | 7800X3D┃5800X3D |
Motherboard | B650E PG-ITX┃X570 Impact |
Cooling | NH-U12A + T30┃AXP120-x67 |
Memory | 64GB 6400CL32┃32GB 3600CL14 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4070 Ti Eagle┃RTX A2000 |
Storage | 8TB of SSDs┃1TB SN550 |
Case | Caselabs S3┃Lazer3D HT5 |
So I went and took the new L12S off, and ordered a L9x65SE because the fitment wasn't going to work out. In the process of cleaning it up, I noticed that the L12S' coldplate was......odd.
I've always been used to Noctuas (minus L9i and L9a, different coldplate) having the same polished finish that falls just short of a mirror finish. As in, there's always the telltale, uniform, concentric ring-like machining marks but otherwise it's smooth enough to see a reflection.
This L12S is completely different. It isn't smooth at all, with a consistently almost "matte" finish. Frustratingly, it really tears up the 99%IPA-soaked paper towels I always use to clean my coolers - leaves a lot of dust/bits/lint behind with every wipe. Exactly what you'd expect if you rubbed a wet paper towel over a polishing stone, for example.
--
L12S: No reflections at all, partly due to the roughness, partly due to the way it's machined around the centre point:
D9L: ~6 years old. Kinda distorted, has parallel "waves" running through it in a west-east direction. But still has a reflection and the machining rings:
U9S: ~1.5 years old, the smoothest coldplate I have from Noctua. Near-mirror, smooth, and flat unlike the D9L, but still has the telltale rings:
--
As should be relatively obvious from clicking on the full resolution photos, the L12S is not like the others, in a rather significant way. Did I miss some major press release stating that Noctua changed its tooling for making these?
It honestly reminds me a little bit of textured plastic, just on a much smaller scale of course:
Anyways, I don't care for this one because I'm returning it for a L9x65. But it was strange to see the finish on a Noctua product depart noticeably from any other Noctua I've owned.
Anyone with a recent L9x65/D9L/U9S/L12S/L12/U12S/U12A/U14S/C14S/D15/D15S feel free to chime in if you remember what your coldplate looks like.
I've always been used to Noctuas (minus L9i and L9a, different coldplate) having the same polished finish that falls just short of a mirror finish. As in, there's always the telltale, uniform, concentric ring-like machining marks but otherwise it's smooth enough to see a reflection.
This L12S is completely different. It isn't smooth at all, with a consistently almost "matte" finish. Frustratingly, it really tears up the 99%IPA-soaked paper towels I always use to clean my coolers - leaves a lot of dust/bits/lint behind with every wipe. Exactly what you'd expect if you rubbed a wet paper towel over a polishing stone, for example.
--
L12S: No reflections at all, partly due to the roughness, partly due to the way it's machined around the centre point:
D9L: ~6 years old. Kinda distorted, has parallel "waves" running through it in a west-east direction. But still has a reflection and the machining rings:
U9S: ~1.5 years old, the smoothest coldplate I have from Noctua. Near-mirror, smooth, and flat unlike the D9L, but still has the telltale rings:
--
As should be relatively obvious from clicking on the full resolution photos, the L12S is not like the others, in a rather significant way. Did I miss some major press release stating that Noctua changed its tooling for making these?
It honestly reminds me a little bit of textured plastic, just on a much smaller scale of course:
Anyways, I don't care for this one because I'm returning it for a L9x65. But it was strange to see the finish on a Noctua product depart noticeably from any other Noctua I've owned.
Anyone with a recent L9x65/D9L/U9S/L12S/L12/U12S/U12A/U14S/C14S/D15/D15S feel free to chime in if you remember what your coldplate looks like.
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