Results 1 to 15 of 15

Thread: Gelid Silent 12 Quiet Fans

  1. #1
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Overclockers UK
    Posts
    264
    Gelid Silent 12 Quiet Fans

    Today I will be reviewing the fans that have I have got for my latest build


    ***progress of this project can be viewed here***


    The fans I have are the Gelid Silent 12 models

    Gelid are fairly new to the scene, as a systems technician I spend a lot of time around new products and very few products catch my eye
    the company I work for used the Gelid Silent Spirit CPU cooler a while back which drummed up a lot of interest in my department


    I was impressed by the performance of the cooler and its compatibility with multiple sockets, however it was the range of cooling solutions that Gelid made that attracted me to the silent fans


    After using the expensive and impressive Noctua NF-P12 fans on my radiators for some time, I was used to great performance and silence
    no other fans I have seen perform on this level except for some larger 38mm thick fans

    FIRST IMPRESSIONS







    Outside the box is a distinctive packaging, the silent range is given a cool looking outer box along with detailed specs on the rear of the pack
    as well as details of performance and a note of a 5 year Warranty - something a lot of fans I have seen before have lacked

    It seems Gelid are confident in the product and this may sway some buyers
    there are three types of fans available in the Gelid silent range

    • silent 12 - which are the ones I am reviewing with just a standard 3 pin fan connector
    • TC - which have a thermal control sensor to control the speed of the fans
    • PWM- which have the 4 pin connector commonly found on CPU fan headers



    Inside the box is the fan, also there are 4 rubber fan mounts included as well as a Gelid case badge

    TESTING

    The Gelid fans certainly look the part - the white blades fit in well with most colour schemes and certainly look different to the standard black fans you see as stock in most cases
    the fan cable is braided in a black braid with a black connector - I am really impressed by the quality of the braid, a feature lacking on the majority of fans in this price range

    COOLING
    the Best way I found to test the fans with consistency is to see results from air and water-cooling setups
    All stress testing was carried out using Prime95 blend test and used RealTemp3 to measure temperatures

    Air Cooling Test Rig
    I7 920 - 4GHz @ 1.28v - Gigabyte UD5 - Patriot Viper - WD Velociraptor - Corsair 850w
    Prolimatech Megahalems CPU cooler with fan on test in push config


    the testing started with the cooler being fitted with some MX-2 thermal Material, I made good contact and ran 'Prime95 Blend Test' for three hours to test for stability using a generic fan
    the generic fan managed to keep the CPU at 90'c or lower under load

    on all testing the fan was run from a Molex to three pin adapter at 12v with no noise adapters

    I then tested with the Noctua NF-P12 for 1 hour exactly using Prime95 Blend
    the fan managed to keep the CPU at 82'c or lower under load

    after this I used the Noctua NF-S12 for 1 hour exactly using Prime95 Blend
    the fan managed to keep the CPU at 89'c or lower under load

    the final test used the Gelid Silent 12 for 1 hour exactly using Prime95 Blend
    the fan managed to keep the CPU at 85'c or lower under load

    So, as you can see - there was little to no difference with one fan in air-cooling

    perhaps two fans would have been more beneficial but the range speaks for itself
    the Gelid is right between the two Noctua models


    Water-cooling Test Rig

    I7 920 - 4.2GHz @ 1.28v - Biostar Tpower X58 - OCZ BLADE - Seagate RAID 0 - Corsair 850w - EK Supreme water block, 10v DDC
    Thermochill PA120.3 Radiator with fans on test in push config [nb. radiator was outside the case]




    this test setup is my own personal system and I have ran the Noctua NF-P12 fans on the radiator for around a month

    the radiator has the three test fans in push configuration - here is a breakdown of results

    3X Noctua NF-P12 after 1 hour of prime95 the CPU temperatures hit 68'C
    3X Noctua NF-S12 after 1 hour of prime95 the CPU temperatures hit 73'C
    3X Gelid Silent 12 after 1 hour of prime95 the CPU temperatures hit 69'C

    Once again the Gelid has come in between the high performance and silent Noctua solutions

    QUIETNESS

    Compared to the much more expensive Noctua NF-P12 and Noctua NF-S12-1200, the Gelid has a CFM rating of 37 compared to the 54cfm and 35CFM of the respective Noctua models

    However I found the Noctua NF-P12 to be quite loud without its low noise adapters and did not feel that the extra speed benefited the cooling enough to warrant the extra noise.

    The Gelid on the other hand is quiet out of the box - whilst pushing an acceptable amount of air it remained silent which was great news as I didn't have to put it onto a low noise adapter to get the best out of it.

    When pitted against the Noctua NF-P12 and Noctua NF-S12 the Gelid was the quietest by a long margin. Not a bad feat for a fan with a retail price roughly a third of the cost of the Noctua models



    SUMMARY

    It is hard to reccomend a fan, most people either want performance, quietness or looks
    The Gelid Silent 12 looks the part, it has a good finish and is made of sturdy material, the cable braid on the fan is great and something I didnt expect to see.
    It is a rare at this price point to see fans with braided cables [and done to a high quality] so kudos to Gelid for that.
    the sticker on the front of the fan was a little much, it could have been simpler - but is easily removed for modding projects etc

    I compared the fan to the Noctua performance and silence models to see if a fan with a MSRP of $7 can keep up the pace with the most expensive fans on the market

    In many respects it can keep up and bearing the price in mind it is great value for money.

    in a market where performance reigns supreme, these quiet little fans manage to keep up with the well established manufactures quite amicably


    My Rating: 8/10



    Many thanks to all at Gelid for supplying the fans for this review

    go to http://www.gelidsolutions.com/ for further information on the company and products
    Last edited by rjkoneill; 07-29-2009 at 03:03 PM.

  2. #2
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Westlake Village, West Hills
    Posts
    3,046
    Good review. It would be nice to compare them to more common fans as well.. such as Yates or some of the other popular fans.
    PC Lab Qmicra V2 Case SFFi7 950 4.4GHz 200 x 22 1.36 volts
    Cooled by Swiftech GTZ - CPX-Pro - MCR420+MCR320+MCR220 | Completely Silent loads at 62c
    GTX 470 EVGA SuperClocked Plain stock
    12 Gigs OCZ Reaper DDR3 1600MHz) 8-8-8-24
    ASUS Rampage Gene II |Four OCZ Vertex 2 in RAID-0(60Gig x 4) | WD 2000Gig Storage


    Theater ::: Panasonic G20 50" Plasma | Onkyo SC5508 Processor | Emotiva XPA-5 and XPA-2 | CSi A6 Center| 2 x Polk RTi A9 Front Towers| 2 x Klipsch RW-12d
    Lian-LI HTPC | Panasonic Blu Ray 655k| APC AV J10BLK Conditioner |

  3. #3
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Overclockers UK
    Posts
    264
    im going to be adding in results for zalman quiet fans as well as some yates soon
    ≠ 4770K - R9 290X Crossfire
    www.overclockers.co.uk

  4. #4
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Modesto, CA
    Posts
    121
    Quote Originally Posted by rjkoneill View Post
    im going to be adding in results for zalman quiet fans as well as some yates soon
    Was looking for some good fans for my rad setup

    plus i like the white

  5. #5
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Posts
    2,128
    Way to fail with the photography, just a slight minus though.

    Good review nevertheless.

  6. #6
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    553
    quiet/ silent are synonyms for useless when used before the word "fan" imo. I'd rather just wire some high cfm fans up to a rheobus or similar. to each his own, good review though.

    Once you go 120x38mm high cfm you dont go back, thats how it was for me.
    As Los Alamos director J. Robert Oppenheimer watched the demonstration, he later said that a line from the Hindu scripture the Bhagavad Gita came to mind:
    "I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
    Test director Kenneth Bainbridge in turn said to Oppenheimer, "Now we are all sons of b**ches." wiki

  7. #7
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    159
    Nice review, and good looking fans.


  8. #8
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    48
    They seem to be very effective for a fan that only has 1000 rpm compared to the Noctua 12-P which has an rpm of 1300.

    I would like to see GELID make one of these with similar specs to the GELID PWM silent fan, i.e an rpm of 1500. With this rotational speed and a 3 pin connector, the fans could then be controlled via a bay fan controller. As it stands the PWM version doesn't work with fan controllers such as the Scythe Kaze Server for example.

    I like the look of the GELID silent series fans and glad to see someone taking the time to do a review of them in relation to water cooling .

    Cheers

  9. #9
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    122
    How much cost this gelid ?
    eVGA P55 FTW - i5 750 - Noctua U9B SE2 - 4GB RidgeBack - Nvidia GTX460
    WD VelociRaptor - WD 2TB - Silverstone ST700W - Logitech K800 - G700
    LG Infinia LED 42" - HTPC Lian Li C33 HtOmega Halo - Yamaha RXV663 - Jamo 418 HCS5
    ~ iPhone 3GS - MacBook Unibody ~

  10. #10
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    between my house and my buddy next door
    Posts
    440
    good fans for feser rads ??


    @darthcani about $7 us
    My build is taking way to long

    Quotes

    dasickninja
    Sweet merciful God... and it survived? Those parts are either Jesus or Juggernaut.


  11. #11
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    202
    Quote Originally Posted by fragmasterMax View Post
    quiet/ silent are synonyms for useless when used before the word "fan" imo. I'd rather just wire some high cfm fans up to a rheobus or similar. to each his own, good review though.

    Once you go 120x38mm high cfm you dont go back, thats how it was for me.
    Why not go with Delta 220CFM fans then? Sure, it'd be like having a rock concert play inside your head, but you get the cooling.

    Quiet fans can still be good, and are definitely more than enough for day-to-day use. Silent however, is a different story since you usually end up with <1 CFM/dba ratio.

    Quiet usually means there is sound but it is non-intrusive.
    Silent usually means that it isn't audible with the human ear.

  12. #12
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    15
    Quote Originally Posted by Necetra View Post
    Why not go with Delta 220CFM fans then?
    I got both the Delta beast and some of these gelids and both are nice in their own ways and have their cons.. The gelid fans look real nice though - the UV green/blues are cool but the frame feels less sturdy than some othres

  13. #13
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Thailand
    Posts
    373
    Gelid Silent 12 or PWM
    • i7 920 D0
    • Gigabyte X58A-UD3R
    • Corsair Dominator 12GB
    • MSI GTX 660 Ti Power Edition OC 2GB
    • OCZ Vertex 4 128GB
    • WD1002FAEX 1TB
    • Corsair HX850W
    • CaseLabs Magnum TH10
    • Dell UltraSharp U2410
    • Logitech G500
    • SteelSeries QcK Mass
    • Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 THX

  14. #14
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Overclockers UK
    Posts
    264
    Quote Originally Posted by Calmatory View Post
    Way to fail with the photography, just a slight minus though.
    i am a computer engineer, not a photographer

    the pics were to give you an idea, its a fan...

    how much detail do you really need?
    ≠ 4770K - R9 290X Crossfire
    www.overclockers.co.uk

  15. #15
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Russia
    Posts
    1,910
    Pretty good looking fans. Would like to play with them.

    Intel Q9650 @500x9MHz/1,3V
    Asus Maximus II Formula @Performance Level=7
    OCZ OCZ2B1200LV4GK 4x2GB @1200MHz/5-5-5-15/1,8V
    OCZ SSD Vertex 3 120Gb
    Seagate RAID0 2x ST1000DM003
    XFX HD7970 3GB @1111MHz
    Thermaltake Xaser VI BWS
    Seasonic Platinum SS-1000XP
    M-Audio Audiophile 192
    LG W2486L
    Liquid Cooling System :
    ThermoChill PA120.3 + Coolgate 4x120
    Swiftech Apogee XT, Swiftech MCW-NBMAX Northbridge
    Watercool HeatKiller GPU-X3 79X0 Ni-Bl + HeatKiller GPU Backplate 79X0
    Laing 12V DDC-1Plus with XSPC Laing DDC Reservoir Top
    3x Scythe S-FLEX "F", 4x Scythe Gentle Typhoon "15", Scythe Kaze Master Ace 5,25''

    Apple MacBook Pro 17` Early 2011:
    CPU: Sandy Bridge Intel Core i7 2720QM
    RAM: Crucial 2x4GB DDR3 1333
    SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256 GB SSD
    HDD: ADATA Nobility NH13 1GB White
    OS: Mac OS X Mavericks

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •