Cooling Fans Reviews

EK Vardar X3M 120 mm D-RGB case fan in test – Very good performance and a bit thicker than the rest

Disclaimer: The following article is machine translated from the original German, and has not been edited or checked for errors. Thank you for understanding!

Fan measurement chamber and claim

And since there is currently no source that offers realistic and usable data, even in comparison, we have invested a lot of time and money and simply developed our own fan measuring station with the advice of a cooling unit manufacturer and then calibrated it. Here the colleague Pascal Mouchel has done a great job and the result as the model “Sarcophagus I” can be seen in the meantime. The heavy and solid body made of thick MDF boards is screwed, glued and sound-insulated. How it all works and what we can and cannot measure in the end, you will learn in this article.

By now most of it has materialized really nicely, also with a lot of good feedback from the community and technical help from some industry partners. Of course, what we can measure from now on only meets semi-professional requirements, even though all measuring instruments have been calibrated in an elaborate and cost-intensive way. But that’s enough for all areas of what concerns the PC self-construction and -conversion. Of course, we are not a standardization company or the TÜV, but we try to measure everything as accurately as possible, which still remains within a reasonably affordable range.

 

Measuring chamber with sound level control (measurement takes place separately)

 

A much simplified version with a long tube instead of the chamber would have been much cheaper, but it is so inaccurate due to the design that the values can only be considered as a rough estimate with many errors. The pressure drop is immense and a serious sound level measurement is simply impossible due to the resonance body thus created. Values below approx. 30 CFM can hardly be evaluated meaningfully and are then no longer particularly close to reality.

Tests as case fan and on radiators

Currently, there is always the question of what characteristics such a 120 or 140 mm fan really has. Not every model is suitable for all radiator thicknesses and many a supposed powerhouse loses so much pressure on radiators that it can hardly be called suitable. The data on volume flow (“throughput”) and static pressure in the data sheets are of no help if something works well on a slim radiator and fails completely on a 45 mm radiator.

In the picture we can see the middle partition between the two chambers, which supports the fan and also the radiator. Decoupling is of course very important, and we were fortunate to have expert help in calculating the volume for the chambers. Each of the chambers is also expediently lined with nubby foam and designed in terms of material technology so that there are hardly any disturbing influences.

The “honeycomb” behind the fan was recommended to us by Black Noise and the cooling manufacturer. This means that all coolers are equally well integrated, because each has a different exit angle and this is exactly what can be compensated for. However, due to the honeycomb, there is no tear-off edge and the airflow is directed directly to the outlet.

Radiators and fans are decoupled and screwed down with their own clamping device. On the picture you can see very nicely the improvised clamp with thick washers and insulation material as a base. The control is done by an Aquaero from Aqua Computer, which we bought, so we can control and test the fans by voltage (DC) or by PWM. Both are needed, because many fans, some people don’t know, can’t be brought to the lower and upper limits of the speed range with pure voltage regulation and also show other anomalies, about which we will write something at the appropriate place.

Volume flow

We measure the volume flow at the outlet of the second chamber where the air is blown out. This range is covered relatively accurately by comparative measurement in the measurement setup of the refrigeration partner, so that our testo 410i now delivers quite reliable results to the electronic measurement data acquisition system, which correspond quite well with the reference data of the professional measurement. What is important here is not the price of the equipment, but the appropriate positioning and the exact calibration with series of comparative measurements.

Static pressure

The measurement of the static pressure is carried out as usual as a differential pressure measurement. For this purpose, the special “bowl” is clamped on so that it closes airtight. Here too, of course, measurements were taken with borrowed, professional equipment and time-consuming calibrations were carried out. For this measurement we also use the 510i, a device we purchased ourselves from testo, and also collect the data wirelessly. Since many try to copy in the meantime, the angles in the 3D-graphics and also on the following two photos are of course not completely correct, because without knowledge of the exact dimensions of the funnel a copy is virtually senseless and it works also only in a quite small tolerance range really completely exactly. We have also made comparative measurement series for this once again. In practice, the whole thing looks like the two pictures below.

The installation is trouble-free and the pressure receptacle now also closes perfectly thanks to a special seal. The rest is just a matter of calibration, which we also did again. It’s unlikely to get much more accurate with semi-professional methods. However, especially in printing, mistakes are quickly possible, which above all are not immediately recognizable. Even if the deviations are small, we will still measure all previous fans again and prepare them for the database.

 

 

Noise emission

Measuring the noise level is a bit tricky, but works quite well in the evening hours at the measurement location. We decided to use dBA or dBC because values below one sone can hardly be measured reliably with still affordable and calibrated equipment and the software conversions of various software programs tend to confuse and become inaccurate in this low range. I’d rather use dBA then, especially since most people can do something with it. The measuring distance is 50 cm from the centre axis of the fan inlet.

We take two approaches to these measurements. For quick and plausibility tests we use a Voltcraft SL 451, which we calibrated according to ISO and whose microphone we placed decoupled from the body. The data acquisition takes place outside the measuring chamber. The Voltcraft SL 451 was kindly and uncomplicatedly provided to us by Conrad Elektronik. It is also the only component not acquired by ourselves. All other measuring instruments including accessories and electronics were purchased by us or provided from private stocks.

Our own purchases include a calibrated measurement microphone with XLR connector and low-noise USB interface. Measurements are taken in the evening and night hours in rural areas, so that one can already be quite satisfied with a basic level of below 26 dB(A). Since everything will be above this anyway during the measurement setup with a distance of 50 cm, this should not be a problem.

We also took the feedback from the community and evaluated the frequency band for each measurement, so you not only get the SPL values (sound pressure) in dB(A), but also a nice frequency analysis that helps to describe the sound character perfectly. Bearing or motor noise, vibrations or the tearing noise on the rotor – everything becomes mercilessly visible.

We will not go into certain details and approaches in this article, because there is still some foreign know-how in this structure and some things would probably be too far for the normal consumer. If you are interested and would like to build something like this, you are of course welcome to contact us. This also applies to all those who would like to contribute suggestions and tips, because we are still at the very beginning and can still correct or expand.

New metrics and graphics

Apart from the fact that we now also record the minimum and maximum values for the flowing currents and the power consumption, we have fulfilled two further wishes of the readers and extended the measurement series in this respect. In order to be able to assess the fans really objectively, we first graduated the resulting volume flow and measured the sound pressure level in many individual steps. The result for a fan then looks like this in comparison to the reference fan:

We see that the increase in the sound pressure level of our test fan is not as even compared to the reference, but the level is still lower at a comparable volume flow. In addition, the fan tested and compared here also delivers a significantly higher airflow due to a 50% higher maximum speed, which in the end is bought with a similar sound pressure level as the reference fan, but whose performance is significantly lower.

And because we just wrote about the rotational speeds, there are also new comparative graphics for this, at the express request of the reader, by showing which rotational speeds are necessary to achieve a certain volume flow. In practice, we can now also see where the dip in the upper graph comes from in terms of volume, because there is a speed range (rather a smaller window) where the fan doesn’t perform so perfectly and spins higher to reach the desired CFM than a more even rise in the curve would have led us to expect.

 

What we measure and how the result looks like, you can see on the next page by means of an exemplary selected fan, which however is anything but our reference. That’s exactly what we are still looking for 🙂

Test setup  
Housing / measuring chamber Two-chamber measuring set-up with sound insulation, fully air-conditioned room
Volume flow and flow velocity testo 410i (calibrated)
Differential pressure measurement testo 510i (calibrated)
Sound level measurement Measuring microphone Class 2 and USB interface, Smaart 7, Voltcraft SL 451 (Conrad, permanent rental, calibrated),
Speed control and fan control Aqua Computer Aquaero 6 Pro
Commissioning March / April 2021

 

Kommentar

Lade neue Kommentare

RedF

Urgestein

4,652 Kommentare 2,549 Likes

Mir scheint eure Tests üben langsam druck auf die Hersteller aus, es kommen immer mehr gute Lüfter auf den Markt.

Antwort 1 Like

RAZORLIGHT

Veteran

355 Kommentare 262 Likes

Japp, Wahnsinn wie sich der Lüftermarkt entwickelt. Langsam wird's schwer sich zu entscheiden.

Für alle die kein RGB wollen, den Lüfter gibt es auch ohne für ~5€ weniger.

Antwort 3 Likes

Igor Wallossek

1

10,177 Kommentare 18,761 Likes
FfFCMAD

Urgestein

668 Kommentare 173 Likes

@Igor: leiser/ lauter im Fazit. Was denn nun :D

Antwort Gefällt mir

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes
a
aclogic

Veteran

118 Kommentare 51 Likes

Leider ist euch eine Sammlung an Fehlern bei diesem Artikel unterlaufen, Ihr habt leider die Werte vom Noctua NF-A12 PWM und bequiet Light Wings 120PWM High Speed vermischt und als bequiet Light Wings 120PWM High Speed ausgegeben.

Antwort Gefällt mir

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes

nee der Be Quiet ist ab sofort die neue Referenz hat bestimmte Gründe. Zukünftig wird der Normale BQ der mit bis zu 1700 dreht mit anderen Lüftern verglichen die auch nur so hoch drehen. Alles was höher dreht wird mit dem BQ HS verglichen.

Grund ist dafür das die Qualitäts Streuung wohl bei Noctua naja nicht das ist was wir gerne von einem Referenz Lüfter sehen wollen.

Daher haben wir uns für BQ entschieden.

Antwort 2 Likes

a
aclogic

Veteran

118 Kommentare 51 Likes

Dann schau dir die Werte nochmal an
z.B. Volumentstrom für 25 mm Radiator in m³/h
aus dem BeQuiettest für die 120mm

Datasheet 100% 1000 rpm 500 rpm
Nocuta 102,1 80,6 40,7 11,8
BQ HS 88,86 78,6 31,4 12,3

aus dem EK Vardar Test

Datasheet 100% 1000 rpm 500 rpm
BQ HS ???? 88,86 80,60 40,7 11,8

Antwort Gefällt mir

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes

ach jetzt kapiere ich es ok danke fürn Hinweis weiß nicht was da passiert ist. Danke wird geändert

Antwort Gefällt mir

Capt.Flint

Mitglied

31 Kommentare 21 Likes

Erstmal einen großen Dank, Lüfter und diesbezügliche Tests werden ja von den Redaktionen eher Stiefmütterlich behandelt. Wahrscheinlich glaubt man, das jeder mit den verbauten inkl. Lüftern gut bedient ist, dabei gibt es nur wenige Komponenten im PC die einen so auf den Nerv gehen können.
Ich habe ins Auge gefasst meine AIO-Lüfter zu wechseln. Das sind dann gleich mal 6-Stk. und ich möchte ja etwas verbessern.
Wenn ihr jetzt schon so einen Schwung an Daten habt, wäre es schön diese in eine kl. Datenbank zu packen, so könnte man sich für seine Anforderungen ein geeignetes "vom Fachmann getestet" Modell aussuchen.
Die m. M nach schönsten ARGB-Lüfter Fractal Prisma AL-12 PWM und -14 PWM könntet ihr auch mal testen um sie besser einordnen zu können (sind sie nur schön oder auch gut?).
Bei Bedarf kann ich auch ein noch ungeöffnetes Exemplar jeweils in 120 und 140 mm aus dem freien Handel für einen Test zur Verfügung stellen.

Antwort Gefällt mir

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes

Welche Lüfter meinst du denn? Und an der Datenbank sind wir dran das wird alles so kommen wie Gewünscht.

Antwort 1 Like

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes

Nebenbei Erwähnt die Daten stimmen jetzt Freunde ich entschuldige mich bei euch das es da zu Technischen Problemen gekommen ist.Das Technische Problem wahr wohl ich selbst. 🙈

Antwort 1 Like

Capt.Flint

Mitglied

31 Kommentare 21 Likes

Fractal Prisma AL-12 PWM und -14 PWM

Antwort Gefällt mir

Pascal TM-Custom

Urgestein

1,122 Kommentare 1,361 Likes

Liegen da und gibt es die Tage als Test

Antwort Gefällt mir

Capt.Flint

Mitglied

31 Kommentare 21 Likes

Ihr seid grandios. THX.

Antwort Gefällt mir

Danke für die Spende



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