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Noctua Fanless CPU Cooler NH-P1 $170.50 Delivered (GST-Inclusive) @ Newegg

170
  • Fanless heatsink for 100% silent cooling through natural convection (see setup guidelines & list of recommended cases) or semi-passive setups with virtually inaudible NF-A12x25 LS-PWM fan (optional)
  • 100% RAM compatibility on AMD AM4 and Intel LGA1200/115x, clears the top PCIe slot on most ATX and µATX motherboards
  • Professional, Torx-based SecuFirm2+ mounting system for Intel LGA115x (LGA1150, LGA1151, LGA1155, LGA1156), LGA1200, LGA20xx (LGA2066, LGA2011-0, LGA2011-3) & AMD AM4, AM3(+), AM2(+), FM2(+), FM1
  • Further improved second-generation NT-H2 thermal compound for optimal overall cooling performance
  • Recommended for CPUs with low to moderate heat dissipation (see CPU compatibility list), e.g. Intel 11600, 10600 or AMD Ryzen 5600X, 4750G, 4650G, 3400G, etc.

Scorptec is the only place on the Australian Pc Part Picker selling this and they want $199 and are out of stock.

Looks heavy. Just thought I'd throw this up and see what sticks.

Night folks!

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closed Comments

  • +2

    Big head

  • Beautiful

  • omg what a beefcake.

    • +4

      A real chonky boi!

    • +2

      I dont believe it will be as efficient.

    • +16

      This is explicitly designed to optimise natural convection in any orientation; it's designed to allow hot air to rise in all orientations. The fins are miles apart to minimise any pressure drop due to moving air, to maximise how much air can get through while still transferring energy.

      Holy crap I need to get out more.

  • Only watched a video on this the other day.

    https://fb.watch/6E2nLagw1G/

  • +2

    You can get open air cases to go with it! All very interesting.

    https://www.fanlesstech.com/2021/07/best-case-scenario.html?…

  • +5

    An in depth review of this fanless cooler from Gamers Nexus.

    • +1

      Im hugely impressed with how much a near silent fan improves it.

      Single 140mm at 800rpm or less, simply nearby, lets this bad boy fall into proper workstation (as in, true burst load) category.

      • +1

        Why put a fan on it though? Get any other Noctua cooler designed with a fan and it will out perform this in cooling, the lack of fan for silence is the only reason you would get this.

        • +2

          Because even the nh d15 needs some fan at light workloads.

          This is able to run a zero-rpm profile for a significant time before a fan nearby would be neeeded to provide further/faster convection within the case.

          If you've ever installed PC's in workshops doing cad/CNC work, your desire for a "fast cad PC" and a "solid state" PC (to avoid metal dust) is very real.

          A single filtered fan in case of rendering demand, yet NOT running constantly, is a genuine significant benefit.

          Plenty of people would like silence 9/10ths of the time, with the ability to load it when needed without facing throttling.

          In fact, a few clients chose 360mm radiators for exactly that reason.

          Silent near an audio booth most of the time; but if the choice comes down to a single 800rpm 140mm fan turning on, or possible cpu throttling during mastering a track? The risk of a low rpm fan is much lower than suddenly finding your asio latency is too high.

  • -4

    Monero mining with this cpu fan. Would be near silent with a x570s board.

    • lol my 5900x consumes 190watts when mining monero

  • +5

    The CPU silence won't make a difference if you have a GPU running.

    • +3

      As per other comments this product has a very niche use case and gaming with a GPU is not it.

    • or HDDs.

      HDD now are the loudest part in a pc.

      • +1

        Easy to switch to ssd since the ssd prices have gone down a lot.

        Fans in PSU is a different problem though. Will be very hard and expensive to get a no fan PSU

    • You'd be surprised.

      I recently built a PC using a much less sophisticated 'passive' cooler on the CPU, and a 360mm rad on the GPU.

      Mounting the rad to the top of the case, the airflow from the 3 fans cooling the GPU were enough to keep the CPU from throttling (though, it didnt boost either; it was walking the line).

      3x120mm fans at 1200rpm is 'silent' in so far as natural sounds, like a breeze, will make it inaudible.

      GPU's are really only loud if you need them to fit in a slot, or the customers arent the custom cooling type (and considering we're looking at an aftermarket cooler here; its safe to assume most people are willing to custom cool).

      You'd be surprised how well some effectively silent systems manage.

  • +1

    This has a very specific use case, absolute silent build or high dust environment. If you are running anything above 65W CPU then I don't think this is good unless you want it to be silent and cannot run at full throttle.

    For people that don't need a specific use case might as well get NH D15 or smaller versions and use low power adapter with 1 fan. If your case has case fans then they most likely will be louder than the fan on Noctua CPU cooler

    • A decent cooler will be inaudible while dissipating 65W within a case .

      • Agreed, making this is a very decent cooler.

        Most others will require an extra point of failure, such as a fan to manage 65W.

        I recently put a NH U12A onto my Ryzen1200 (its my htpc/overnight encoding pc) with a -100mV undervolt, and it couldnt keep up while running handbrake, without adding a fan.

        The case has its PSU fan always on, so I did have hot-air extraction.

        Soon she'll be silent again.

  • I want to have a desktop PC again just so I can have this heatsink. What a monster.

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