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General Liquid/Water Cooling Discussion For discussion about Full Cooling System kits, or general cooling topics. Keep specific cooling items like pumps, radiators, etc... in their specific forums. |
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12-29-2005, 03:31 PM | #26 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Jul 2005
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Yate loons, Papst, and panaflo were used by Cathar to design the RAD. These would be the most efficient fans for the RAD. I would assume the panaflo being the best performer out of the three fans. I would PM Marci or Cathar for more info because i they might have some information on this.
Recommended fan list http://silentpcreview.com/article63-page2.html More from the forums from Dr. Fan http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=16393 BTW Buy a better fan controller. I agree with Etacovda |
12-29-2005, 03:38 PM | #27 | |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
Agreed on that one. The first one I had sucked...buzzed all the time. The new one I have had for a while is pretty darn good and makes zero noise. |
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12-29-2005, 06:57 PM | #28 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Denmark
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
It's funny how different people experience noise and what they call "loud". A 120mm fan at 2100RPM like the Panaflo M1A would make me going crazy, but a lot of people around the world call it "low noise" (but not in Denmark!). A Panaflo L1A (1700RPM) is what I call "acceptable", but it's for sure not silent!
As I already wrote my Papst 4412F/2GL (120x25mm, 1600RPM, Sintec sleeve bearing...) is also acceptable like the Panaflo L1A, but I prefer it at 7v. Also I've seen at different sites that this fan is not a good choice for radiators. My point of making this thread is my concern of the current radiator designs. The radiators on the market have a very restrictive air design with louvered fins, short space between the fins, the radiators are 5cm thick... 120mm fans at low speeds like 1200RPM won't be able to cool the radiator efficiently enough allowing uncooled water to pass. These radiators are great for people tolerating fans like 120x38mm Panaflo M1A @ 2100RPM, but not for most danish people - we want 120x25mm fans @ >1200RPM. My friend recently switched his DangerDen double heatercore out with a Hayden 676 (stacked plate aluminum oil cooler - formerly used in Swiftechs kits). He gained about 5 celcius degrees load on his 4,2GHz Prescott with the fans at same speed (running below 1200RPM). His explanation is that the Heatercore was to thick for low CFM fans like 120mm @ >1200RPM so that uncooled water passed through the heatercore. I recognize what he says when I look at the PA160.1 - the core is only 25mm thick and it's made for low noise fans, but it's unfortunately to big for my miditower. I now turn for PA120.X, but I'm skeptical about it's thicksness of 61mm - will it suffer like the heatercore did? I find it interesting to that Swiftech's own radiators only are 30mm thick and they are know for high performance systems... maybe there's something to it - but only for people who REALLY NEED SILENCE. I have then concluded that the high fin desinty, louvered fins and so on will not change now so I'm looking for a fan that can overcome the resistance and pruduce a lot of pressure at low RPM. Therefor I'm interested in the SilverStone fans in my #1 post... they have 9 blades wich should make them good to make pressure - one of them is also 32mm thick wich also helps. I don't hope the post is to long Last edited by Salkcin; 12-29-2005 at 07:14 PM. |
12-29-2005, 07:33 PM | #29 | |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
http://www.thermochill.com/pa1201.php not sure how a dtek pro-core (readily available in denmark) would compare on air-resistance... from the swiftech "Assessment of Radiators Performance" it is 11 FPI, but is 50mm thick http://www.swiftnets.com/Technical/A...erformance.pdf |
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12-29-2005, 08:14 PM | #30 | |
Cooling Neophyte
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
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12-29-2005, 11:09 PM | #31 |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Hamer, S.C.
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
My first wc build, and need help deciding on fans for u2 ufo case, with pa120.3 rad. Would like to keep it quite under 30db ( 9 fans,is it possible? ). Plan to get a performance board and a dual opty or amd x2). Will I be able to push this cpu using fans in the 47- 55 cfm range? (4412fgl or yl d12sl-12) or lower in the 37 cfm range (nexus 120), using pa120.3 rad?
also looking at t-balancer to undervolt any of the above fans during idle. thanks |
12-30-2005, 02:45 AM | #32 |
Cooling Savant
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Location: california
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
I had the 3.5" version and it was noisy so I sent it back and shallowed 15% restock fee. Those old fan controllers are ancient and there are many new fan controllers that are better. Decent controller should go lower than 7V.
Zalman has one that switchs from 12 V or 5 V and PWM, makes life really easy. I really like the T-balancer or crystal fontz reviewed by Joe. Haven't got my grimmy hands on one yet but I will soon. $$$ shortage. Cathar's response to another post http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/sho...134#post152134 SALKIN 9 blade fan = glacialtech silentblades. I heard at low RPM these 25mm fans ~ nexus fan but degrade with age because of ball bearings. I never heard about 35mm fan but I bet it's similiar to panaflo or worse. Last edited by ricecrispi; 12-30-2005 at 03:26 AM. |
12-30-2005, 03:32 AM | #33 | |
Thermophile
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Location: Melbourne, Australia
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
Heck, I even ran a Laing D5 pump off one of the channels at 12v for a while (~30 mins) before I realised what I was doing and how much load I was putting on the controller. It handled the load just fine, but the channel controller that the pump was on sure got hot. Extremely hot, but it coped. |
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12-30-2005, 03:38 AM | #34 |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Salkin
Heatercores are not silent focused or even designed for WCing. Thermochill rads are and the PA series is focused towards silent WCing. Apples and Pears. Look at the link and the PA fans have a very low fin density to the point I was shocked. Swiftech rads are not a bad choice and I would buy them myself but I would get a Thermochill rad if I had the money. |
12-30-2005, 03:41 AM | #35 |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Maybe an older vantec versions? Mine had a slighy buzz like a UV light module kit.
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12-30-2005, 03:52 AM | #36 |
Thermophile
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Location: France
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
BTW the Adda 1212LB is used by Lian Li for their high end V-Series cases, and by Seasonic for their high end 500W/600W PSUs. I got mine with the Lian Li :P
Here are the specs adda 1212LB: 1800 rpm 72 cfm pressure 0.095" 34.4 dBA Nice noise/performance ratio in my opinion. The Delta i cited is comparable to the Panaflo Bill is using for his tests (and yes i was surprised to find a 'quiet' fan with a Delta label !) The best thing to do is what Bill said: buy several fans, compare them, keep the best according to your tastes, sell the excess About fan controllers it's to be noted that Papst fans dont like PWM at all, they produce a hum. An adequate controller would be the m-cubed MiniNG (which is also adequate for Laing pumps btw), it's smaller than their flagship T-balancer controller and less expensive. It has only 2 headers though (still adequate for 1-fan systems :P) and you can choose between PWM and analog. It has a proper heatsink so it won't fry in analog mode |
12-30-2005, 08:14 AM | #37 | |
Cooling Neophyte
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Denmark
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Is there a general rule of how much static pressure mmH2O is enough for radiatorcooling or do I miss other factors?
There's a Coolermaster fan - 120x38mm, 1200RPM (wee), 56CFM and a static pressure of 1,40 mmH2O - is this good for a radiator like PA120.1 or Swiftech MCR120. - Coolermaster fan link Is the static pressure proportional so if it's "1" at 2000RPM it's "0,5" at 1000RPM? Am I wrong if I assume that the more static pressure per RPM a fan makes the better is it for radiatorcooling? Quote:
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12-30-2005, 09:04 AM | #38 | |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
Manufacturers don't publish RPM vs Pressure curves. Nore do they publish RPM vs Noise curves. Fans are designed to do a specific job. Most (non watercooling ppl) just buy the fan that fits and delivers the required CFM. Undervolting is not used in the "real world". This freekish community has discovered undervolting and thereby opened up a whole new world of fan choices. I see undervolting as a really, really nit pickey way of getting the CFM vs noise ratio to that ever elusive "sweet spot". IMHO, picking a fan that gives the max cooling at the rated voltage is the way to go. Then undervolt to get less noise for those times when you don't need max cooling. How much undervolting? how much noise? those are personal preferences. With the availability of PWM comtrollers it's hard to go wrong with any fan that gives you the cooling you need. I'm putting together a 2X120 Rad with 2 190 CFM fans, will it be loud...h@#% yes! can I get the fans to run slow enough to be livable and still provide adequate cooling for non intensive use? probably. Is more static ressure per RPM better is a question like " Is blue bigger than 47 degrees celcius?" It doesn't matter. It's noise and cooling. And I agree "thick" or anything else that impeeds airflow requires higher flow (higher noise and higher RPM) fans.
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12-30-2005, 09:13 AM | #39 |
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
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12-30-2005, 10:04 AM | #40 |
Thermophile
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
yes this is not a linear relation
Here is an example of flow vs pressure curve - for instance the graph for the papst 4212 NGML (38 dBA @12V) and the 4212 L (28dBA @12V) And more interesting they have "variofans" so they publish speed vs pressure/flow curves: this is for a 80x25 variofan, controlled by a thermistor, so it's temperature which varies, but basically the thermistor (with its control circuitry) varies the voltage between 8V and 12V. The only problem is the thermistor response to temperature linear ? Like billbartuska said we are a special population - when engineering products for the industry the provided graphs are enough, you just want to know temperature vs flow, the actual voltage / rpm is not relevant. |
12-30-2005, 04:43 PM | #41 | |
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
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12-30-2005, 06:52 PM | #42 | |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
Salkin The panaflos M are very quiet at 7V. They vibrate a little bit but if you isolate them properly you can hardly hear them at 7V. The Panaflo M series at 9 V is about the same as L series. |
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01-12-2006, 09:30 AM | #43 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
I wrote to Silverstone and requested performance curves for their 120mm fans (FM121 and FM122).
Now I have them I thought if you could read them? no values are written - there's just a curve. Should I write them for futher information or does the curves tell if they are good fans for watercooling. The FM122 should be designed for high air pressure operation. |
01-12-2006, 09:59 AM | #44 |
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
noise vs. speed
need the other curves to consider but only by comparative testing will you know specs alone are not sufficient |
01-12-2006, 12:02 PM | #45 | |
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Quote:
1) Specs lie. Some more than others. 2) Ears are different. |
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01-17-2006, 11:03 PM | #47 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
The Sany Denki San Ace 120mms I have modded to 7V are pretty damn quiet in comparison to my old Panaflos. I also tested them at 5V and they are virtually silent.
I only decided to use 7V for now since it seems to help keep things a bit cooler. The Nexus controller I was using before seemed to make these particular fans buzz to all hell. No idea why. |
01-18-2006, 01:41 AM | #48 |
Cooling Savant
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
How much for the fans and can you provide a link from where you pruchased it if possible.
EDIT: I went to Sanyo Denki website and saw some large fans. Is there any reasons why no one suggest larger fans like the 140 x 38mm fan or 140x50mm fans? Last edited by ricecrispi; 01-18-2006 at 02:01 AM. |
01-18-2006, 07:24 AM | #49 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
I bought my fans from this guy: http://www.hardforum.com/showthread.php?t=974021
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02-17-2006, 11:48 PM | #50 |
Cooling Neophyte
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Re: How to choose the optimal 120mm fan?
Just my two cents.
I have some Sanyo Denkis that are wired for 7 volts and are fine. Never had a problem with them not starting. They dont have a motor whine but they do have a bearing noise and when combined with the radiator they make more noise. Right now my fan on my evga 7800gt is louder than the Denkis at 7 volts(at 12v they are unbearable). I was thinking of getting M1as but at 7v they put out slightly less air than the Yates-Loon at 12v and the noise is about the same. I have 3 Yates loon also and will test if there is any temp difference in my system between Yates at 12v and Denki at 7v with a PA 120.3. |
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