Thermaltake SWAFAN 12 RGB Review - Swappable Fan Blades! 13

Thermaltake SWAFAN 12 RGB Review - Swappable Fan Blades!

Closer Examination »

Packaging and Accessories


Thermaltake refers to the SWAFAN 12/14 RGB specifically as radiator fans too, and it is even part of the product name on its website and the packaging seen above. At the time of this review, you can only purchase these fans in a triple pack with the company intending for them to be used on 360 mm (or 420 mm with the 140 mm fans) radiators. No surprise then that the product box—which ships inside a plastic wrap—is more cubical in design. On the front is the company logo and product name along with a render of the fan lit up and salient marketing features listed fully. You can also see exactly what comes inside the box here, and more illustrations + marketing points are listed on the back. Product specs greet us on the side, and here we also see the use of seals and a double flap to help keep the contents inside in place during transit.


The inner box adopts a stacked design with the replacement fan blades at the top inside individual plastic blister tray and foam protective inserts too. The fans themselves are at the bottom with more foam between the individual pieces, and the accessories are found in a cardboard box in the middle. There is plenty of paperwork included here in the form of a warranty policy, an installation note, and a quick guide on using the fans with the Tt RGB Plus software itself. The other accessories come individually packed in plastic, and here we see fan screws for using these fans just inside a case as opposed to on a radiator in addition to longer screws for typical AIO installation (UNC 6-32 threads). A hook-and-loop section helps with mounting of the dedicated controller which we will look at below, and notice also the thin tube of lubricating agent here akin to how you might get thermal paste. This is effectively oil you would drop into the bearing support for the fan blades in the fan hub after an indeterminate amount of fan blade swapping. Basically if you see the bearings are drying out, just place some in there.


I am not a big fan (heh) of how many near-proprietary fan connections there are in 2022, and Tt adds to the pile with the SWAFAN 12 RGB. We get three cables in total here—a power cable using MOLEX, a micro USB to 9-pin internal USB 2.0 cable (w/daisy-chained micro USB), and an extension cable using another micro USB connector. Why Tt didn't use SATA and USB Type-C I'll never know! These are cables you would use with the provided controller, with the extension/daisy-chain for when you have up to two controllers in the same system.


Now we get to the controller itself, which is a new design from Thermaltake. It's shaped like a bloated power bank almost with plastic construction entirely in black. On the sides are five fan ports for the 9-pin connectors that are similar looking to an internal USB connector itself, although even Tt recommends only connecting three fans per controller owing to power limitations for the LEDs involved. Power and data connections are on the other sides, and the underside has a set of four dip switches that you move up/down in specific arrangements based on the number of fans (Edit: it could also be controllers) connected. Given the ability to connect two individually powered controllers together for software control, you use these dip switches accordingly.


The final set of accessories, and arguably the thing you are buying these fans are, are the replacement fan blades themselves. These are called "fan blade 2" by Thermaltake and allow for the reverse fan configuration relative to the standard one, which is clear once you look at the rotor positioning that pull air through rather than push them the other way. The sticker on the motor hub cover is also silver in color with the Tt logo on it, and the rotor itself is white in color to assist with the RGB feature of the fans.
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Jul 29th, 2024 20:15 EDT change timezone

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