Noctua NH-U12p SE with i7 6700K

Rixio Alvarado

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Sep 22, 2014
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Hi guys, do you think this legend it’s capable to handle a decent over clock on my i7 6700K? Or it’s time to upgrade it? I was think to change the fans for the gray ones for aesthetics.

Motherboard Evga classified K z170
Case Corsair 500R
 
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Water is always an option, however it's an option I don't much like unless it's for aesthetic reasons and can't be avoided, OR it's pretty hard to speak against doing a custom loop for those looking to configure very high daily driver overclocks.

Otherwise, I much prefer air. You don't ever stand any chance of developing a leak and ruining hardware with an air cooler like you do with any kind of water cooling, and it does happen, often enough.

The Noctua NH-U14S is a good option as well. It is what I run, with dual fans, one of them a Noctua Chromax NF-A14 PWM and the other fan is a Noctua industrial PPC2000rpm NF-A14 PWM on the back in pull configuration. That way there is no additional resistance to the attempt of the front fan to...
If that has the NF-P12 fans on it currently, I'd stick two NF-A12x25 PWM fans on there and call it a day. Don't look to the gray Noctua Redux fans for performance. They do not perform as well as the standard Noctua fans or the black Chromax Noctua fans.
 
What country are you in?



Below is my list of preferred CPU AIR coolers, also known as Heatsink fans (HSF).

Do not look here for recommendations on water/liquid cooling solutions. There are none to be found.


They are basically listed in order of preference, from top to bottom. To some degree that preference is based on known performance on similarly overclocked configurations, but not entirely. There are likely a couple of units that are placed closer to the top not because they offer purely better performance than another cooler which is below it, but potentially due to a variety of reasons.

One model might be placed higher than another with the same or similar performance, but has quieter or higher quality fans. It may have the same performance but a better warranty. Long term quality may be higher. It may be less expensive in some cases. Maybe it performs slightly worse, but has quieter fans and a better "fan pitch". Some fans with equal decibel levels do not "sound" like they are the same as the specific pitch heard from one fan might be less annoying than another.

In any case, these are not "tiered" and are not a 100% be all, end all ranking. They are simply MY preference when looking at coolers for a build or when making recommendations. Often, which HSF gets chosen depends on what is on this list and fits the budget or is priced right at the time due to a sale or rebate. Hopefully it will help you and you can rest assured that every cooler listed here is a model that to some degree or other is generally a quality unit which is a lot more likely to be worth the money spent on it than on many other models out there that might look to be a similarly worthwhile investment.

Certainly there are a great many other very good coolers out there, but these are models which are usually available to most anybody building a system or looking for a cooler, regardless of what part of the world they might live in. As always, professional reviews are usually an absolutely essential part of the process of finding a cooler so if you are looking at a model not listed here, I would highly recommend looking at at least two or three professional reviews first.

If you cannot find two reviews of any given cooler, it is likely either too new to have been reviewed yet or it sucked, and nobody wanted to buy one in order to review it plus the manufacturer refused to send samples out to the sites that perform reviews because they knew it would likely get bad publicity.

IMO, nobody out there is making better fans, overall, than Noctua, followed pretty closely by Thermalright. So if you intend to match case fans to the same brand on your HSF, those are pretty hard to beat. Of course, Corsair has it's Maglev fans, and those are pretty damn good too, but since they don't make CPU air cooling products, only AIO water coolers, they cannot join the party.


Noctua NH-D14 (Replace stock fans with NF-A14 industrialPPC 2000rpm)
Noctua NH-D15/D15 SE-AM4
Noctua NH-D14 (With original fans)
Thermalright Silver arrow IB-E Extreme
Phanteks PH-TC14PE (BK,BL, OR or RD)
Cryorig R1 Ultimate or Universal
Thermalright Legrand Macho RT
Thermalright Macho 120
Noctua NH-U14S
Scythe Mugen max
Scythe Mugen 5 rev.b
BeQuiet dark rock pro (3 or 4)
BeQuiet dark rock (3 or 4)
Deepcool Assassin II
Thermalright true spirit 140 (Direct, Power, BW)
Cryorig H5
Noctua NH-U12S
Phanteks PH-TC12DX (Any)
Phanteks PH-TC14S
Cryorig H7
Deepcool Gammaxx 400
Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO



 

Rixio Alvarado

Reputable
Sep 22, 2014
16
0
4,510
In USA California, thank you for your answer, may be it’s time to get another HTSK, I’m thinking in another Noctua, dh-15 or maybe jump to water cooling. The evga 240 looks nice.
 
Water is always an option, however it's an option I don't much like unless it's for aesthetic reasons and can't be avoided, OR it's pretty hard to speak against doing a custom loop for those looking to configure very high daily driver overclocks.

Otherwise, I much prefer air. You don't ever stand any chance of developing a leak and ruining hardware with an air cooler like you do with any kind of water cooling, and it does happen, often enough.

The Noctua NH-U14S is a good option as well. It is what I run, with dual fans, one of them a Noctua Chromax NF-A14 PWM and the other fan is a Noctua industrial PPC2000rpm NF-A14 PWM on the back in pull configuration. That way there is no additional resistance to the attempt of the front fan to push since the back fan is always going to be at a higher RPM at any given thermal value. I get about 67°C maximum temps running Prime95 version 26.6 Small FFT option or any other stress test on an Intel 6700k@4.6Ghz with 1.34v core voltage and LLC level 4 on a Hero VIII board.

I could probably do even better with this heatsink and fan combination if I wanted to, but since it's a daily driver I'm pretty happy with it as is.

Tweaktown also tested the NH-U14S, on their very same test platform, and the NH-U14S outperforms the NH-D15S by .25°C.

Using two fans, the NH-U14S has a lower overclocked max temp (68°C) than the NH-D15S (69.3°C) that DOES have two fans. So given that, I'm not sure I'd ever want the heavier, more expensive cooler. And yes, those are both LGA 115x Intel socket test results. Even if there is some small amount of variance between tests, you're clearly in the same ball park with both coolers, yet the U14S takes up a LOT less room than the D15 variants.

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