That's a typo, right? NH-U14S is a much bigger and powerful cooler.
Not a typo; A mistake. I remember the NH-U14 being wide and short, so when I looked up dimensions it was 165x150, I mistakenly assumed 150 was the height.
But no, the height is 165mm. Still very short for a 140mm tower, but not as short as this NH_D12L
If you know any brand which can match Noctua in quality, cooling and noise profile, let me know.
I mean that's not hard, look at the charts for performance, performance/$, and noise-normalised performance: Noctua are not outright winners in
any of those metrics - so you can get better performing coolers, cheaper coolers, and quieter coolers than Noctua. What Noctua offer is a good balance of everything, great mounting hardware and free mounting kit upgrades. The D15 isn't the best large air cooler any more, the U12S and U12A aren't the best 120mm towers any more and this isn't the best compact cooler either. Whilst you can't go wrong with a Noctua you can usually get similar performance for less money.
But are there many cases where [AIOs] actually will outperform though? For a large radiator to make any sense it still needs to be placed somewhere with good airflow (both intake and exhaust). Nearly all reviews are conducted on open benches, so that is not representative for real world scenarios.
I mean, if you don't have good case airflow (both intake and exhaust) it doesn't matter whether you use AIO or an air cooler - you're screwed either way. If anything, I'd rather use an AIO in a case with extremely limited airflow because at least with an AIO you can have the radiator as an exhaust so that the CPU's heat never gets put back into the case. It won't be the best cooling for your CPU but in hotbox/cramped case with limited airflow the single most important thing you have to do is get heat out of the case. The rest of the components can fend for themselves as long as the case itself isn't turned into an oven by a CPU or GPU cooler that's dumping hot exhaust into the case!