Noctua NH-L9x65 Review: Noctua Nano?

Source: Tom's Hardware added 07th May 2021

  • noctua-nh-l9x65-review:-noctua-nano?

Our Verdict

The NH-L9x65 provides all the impressive Noctua engineering you’d expect in an exceptionally tiny footprint. And while it’s expensive, unlike other compact downdraft cooler designs, it boasts 100% PCI-e card and memory compatibility on Intel platforms.

For

  • + Quality build and design
  • + Simple to install
  • + 100% memory and graphics cards clearance on ITX platforms

Against

  • – Price
  • – Fan noise at 100% PWM

Features and Specifications

Noctua is held in high regard due to exceptional build quality and some of the best large heatpipe air coolers money can buy. But armed with a 14mm thin fan at just 90mm in diameter, how does the compact Noctua NH-L9x65 sibling perform on small system builds while squeezing into a space only 95mm x 95mm square and just 65mm (3.74 x 3.74 x 2.56 inches) tall?  The majority of Noctua’s line focuses on large, nearly silent cooling behemoths like the NH-D15, but is the same possible in a pint-sized package?

Specifications

Height 2.0″ / 51mm
(2.55″ / 65mm w/fan)
Width 3.75″ / 95mm
Depth 3.75″ / 95mm
Memory Clearance No Limit
Assy. Offset 0
Cooling Fans (1x) 90mm x 14mm
Connectors (1x) 4-pin PWM
Weight 15.0 oz / 425g
Intel Sockets 115x, 1200,
2011x (square ILM), 2066
AMD Sockets AM2(+), AM3(+), AM4,
FM1, FM2(+)
(some AMD sockets may require backplate)
Warranty 6-years
Web Price $55

Feature

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The Noctua NH-L9x65 might be incredibly compact, but the boxed contents include a wide array of components to allow for most Intel and AMD desktop processor sockets, although some AMD chips might require an applicable backplate (see Noctua’s product site for details). Most of the mounting hardware is nickel plated, and a 4-pin PWM speed reduction cable and angled screwdriver are included in the box.

Also per the Noctua norm, an enamel and nickel-plated metal logo badge comes standard, as does a tube of the company’s NT-H1 thermal compound. Noctua covers the NH-L9x65 with a generous 6-year warranty.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The heatsink of the NH-L9x65 features four heatpipes which are tightly angled to wrap into the stack of 50 cooling fins overhead. This design gives the cooler a compact footprint, but also means that due to the 95mm cooler length and width, the overall cooling fin stack has less surface area to dissipate heat than larger downdraft coolers. 

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

Airflow is moved over the NH-L9x65 from NF-A9-x14 PWM fan (90mm x14mm). This small, narrow fan is rated up to 2500 RPM, has built-in rubber mounting pads and utilizes a 4-pin PWM header. A pair of wire clips secure and support the fan during use.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The base of the NH-L9x65 features a milled, nickel-plated base, which clamps each of the four heatpipes against the integrated mounting plate of the cooler. At either side of the mounting plate sits a spring machine screw which is used to properly tension the cooler to the mounting crossbars and simplifies alignment over the CPU during installation.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The base of the NH-L9x65 is milled flat, preventing any lighting from peeking beneath our steel ruler held flat against the base. Also visible from this angle is a view into the small tolerances between the cooler base, heatpipes and the heatsink fins themselves, showing just how compact this component truly is.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

Mounting and removing the NH-L9x65 provides us with a universal thermal compound spread of our standard MX-4 testing paste. Concentric circles give us a view into how the cooler is centered and the mount allows for equal tensioning, provided the installer takes their time and applies pressure evenly to each side.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

With the mounting hardware installed and the cooler positioned over the crossbars, getting the Noctua NH-L9x65 into place is as easy as aligning the machine tension screws over the threaded mounting posts. We can also see how the cooler claims an unlimited memory DIMM clearance by lining up just a few millimeters from the installed system RAM. 

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The fan clips to the heatsink to complete the downdraft airflow design of the NH-L9x65.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

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Features and Specifications

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Read the full article at Tom's Hardware

brands: AMD  Area  Best  Built  Cooler  Intel  It  Majority  Noctua  other  Ram  simple  Space  Tom  Universal  Unlimited  
media: Tom's Hardware  
keywords: ITX  Memory  Review  

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