Featured

Phanteks PH-F140TS 140mm Fan Review

PerformanceMeasuring temperatures is all about being consistent; therefore we make sure that the test is kept completely fair so that none of the fans are at a disadvantage. We measure the temperature of our overclocked CPU using HWMonitor after a 15 minute load period using Prime95 with the small FFTs setting.

The chart shows the delta CPU temperature (difference between ambient temperature and recorded CPU temperature). This way we can fairly compare each cooler without presenting any inaccuracies due to slight fluctuations in the ambient temperature or unfair results.

Here is an example of how to understand delta temperatures. “If the ambient (room) temperature is 25C and the recorded CPU temperature is 65C, the delta temperature is the CPU’s temperature rise above ambient temperature, therefore the delta temperature in this case would be 40C. If the ambient temperature is 23C and the recorded CPU Temperature is 80C, the delta temperature in this case would be 57C. Delta temperature = Recorded CPU temperature – Ambient temperature”.

The PH-F140TS fans show pleasing thermal performance when coupled with the NZXT Havik 140 heatsink. They manage to beat the cooler’s supplied 140mm, 1200RPM NZXT fans even when the Q.S.A adapter is used and the Phanteks samples are throttled to 900RPM. This is very impressive considering that the NZXT fans can potentially be tailor made for their job on this specific heatsink. None of the low RPM solutions can keep up with the 1900RPM Scythe Slipstream fan though. Even though it loses some blade real estate being a 120mm form factor, it still manages to top the performance chart.

We decided to measure the maximum RPM of each fan tested. This will not only help you to understand and reveal the reasoning behind the performance shown above, it will also allow us to check that the quality of each fan is acceptable and they are performing within their +/- 10% RPM threshold.

It now becomes clear why the 120mm Slipstream took such a distinct lead in the cooling performance test. Even the slowest of the pair of Scythe fans is rotating over 50% faster than its fastest competitor. Considering that both Phanteks solutions have a lower average RPM than their NZXT competitors, the victory is even more impressive than we originally thought. Every fan is running within the quoted +/-10% margin of RPM error, so quality control isn’t an issue.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Luke Hill

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

SK hynix Starts Mass Production of World’s First 321-High NAND

SK Hynix has once again pushed the boundaries of semiconductor technology, announcing today the mass…

5 hours ago

Sharkoon Launches OfficePal C40 and OfficePal C40M Chairs

Sharkoon, a well-known name in PC peripherals and gaming accessories, has expanded its office furniture…

5 hours ago

Google Must Sell Chrome and, Perhaps, Android, for the US Department of Justice

In a motion filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday, November 19,…

6 hours ago

PHILIPS Evnia 27M2C5501 180Hz QHD FreeSync Gaming Monitor Review

Philips is well known for its monitors, but its Evnia series stands as the jewel…

7 hours ago

MSI Introduces New NVIDIA MGX Servers, Featuring Intel Xeon 6 and New Server Boards

Alongside AMD servers, MSI showcased its NVIDIA MGX AI servers and Intel Xeon 6 solutions…

23 hours ago

Intel’s Next Generation of Accelerators Will Be Called Jaguar Shores

Intel has its Gaudi 2 accelerators available, and Gaudi 3 will be available soon. But…

1 day ago