And I don't argue with that.
What??? You started out this exchange by saying, after I said CFM is what matters most,
I am glad you finally come around, contradicted yourself and now accept the true facts.
I hope you realize how pointlessly obnoxious you are being here.
Ummm, that was me being sarcastic - marveling at your advanced skills when you, just by looking at the pictures, determined the one (but apparently not the other) manufacturer totally lied about their CFM specs and how you quickly noted that, because the blades were translucent, they must be inferior and noisy. Sorry you didn't pick up on that.
It's not an absolute, it's just a common tendency, due to 120mm fans mostly being the same. That's due to universally accepted
This is more nonsense from you. First, you said "you always get..". That "IS" speaking in absolutes. So more contradictions.
And you don't speak for the universe - or most experts. It is NOT universally accepted that 120mm (or any size computer case fan) fans are mostly the same because they are NOT mostly the same - EXCEPT that they all (and yes, "all" is an absolute) fit standard 120mm fan mounting spots and have
nearly identical blade lengths. Beyond that, there are vast differences - many of which have already been pointed out.
Now I will give you that many, if not most budget/cheap/generic fans probably are "mostly the same". But I have been saying all along, starting in post #2 above to get "
a quality fan".
@Shrek - sorry Andy, for all the misinformation and nonsense posted in this thread. I hope you have culled out the hogwash.
The bottom line is simple. More air means better cooling. So look at the CFM ratings. If fan noise is a concern, by all means, look there too. RPM ratings are meaningless when choosing between two fans. There is absolutely nothing to suggest a faster spinning fan will cool better just because it spins faster. Again, it is about how much air it is moving.
But remember, it is the case's responsibility to provide a sufficient supply of cool air "flowing" through the case. With good case cooling, odds are any "
quality" CPU fan you pick will rarely ever need to spin at full speed (and loudness) anyway - especially if it has a "
quality" heatsink to work with.