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The Cooler
The NH-C12P is designed to work with the two most popular sockets available today. And it claims to have high compatibility with any type of motherboard out there. Since it’s such a large cooler I’d make sure to check whether you have enough clearance around the socket because there are 6 pipes sticking out of the side of this cooler.
Once you unpack the cooler, you’re basically left with a big piece of aluminum and copper weighing over 550grams without the cooler and 730grams with it. This shouldn’t be too much of a problem because the mounting system used with this cooler is very decent. The base of this cooler is made out of copper, so are the heat pipes. The fins are aluminum and have soldered joints. And to make it look extra nice they’ve nickel plated the entire thing.
The NH-C12P has 6 copper heat pipes which have been nickel plated, along with the copper base and the aluminum fins. This gives a really nice look to it but it also gives the base a very smooth finish.
Along with this cooler comes Noctua’s NF-P12 120mm fan which as you can see on the photo above, has cuts in each blade. It normally runs at 1300 RPM and it can be turned down to 1100 and 900 rpm using the L.N.A. cables, these cables have each a different resistor to decrease the voltage of the fans. If you run this cooler at its normal speed than its semi noticeable, but once you plug it in using one of these L.N.A. (Low-Noise-Adaptor) cables then its dead silent. Just the way I like my system and it won’t interfere with the performance all that much either, but we’ll get to that later on in this review.
As I said these fans have something unusual to them. They have cuts in each of the blades; you will also notice that the blades are positioned very closely to each other. This results in better airflow but it also generates more noise. This is why Noctua added these Vortex-Control notches. More detailed information on how they work and what they do, can be found over here.