Amazon Customer
Fans are great and feel nice and sturdy. When spinning they are spinning sub 1500 rpm they are very quiet. I have 3 of them running all at once at 1500 rpm (my MOBO's system fan headers do not have PWM controls, despite having 4 pins so they run at 60% speed) and they are quite audible, but considering that there are 3 of these each running at 1500 rpm, it's great. I've heard louder fans running at 1500 rpm and these are silent compared to those. I recommend to use these fans with a PWM controller, otherwise if you use too many, it will get loud, since each fan will default to 1500 rpm. These fans also push a lot of air and the LEDs shine pretty well compared to the regular SP/AF series. The LEDs are placed around the inner ring of the fan as opposed to the 4 corners of the frame like the SP/AF series. I would recommend to get these fans when they are on sale. $27.99 is pretty hefty for a fan, but I got these for $22 each on sale.
AltF4UnInstall
I am a big fan, get it? big fan...... (cheese), of these Corsair Magnetic Levitation fans. The whole awesome concept of the magnetic levitation is the ability to have the fans spin at higher rpm's with less friction, meaning less noise compared to other fans running at the same rpm's. In addition, these fans also provide a flow type of 'static pressure'. This flow type is great for pushing air through a radiator, which is used in a typical water cooling setup within a computer. Furthermore, with these fans having the ability to reach a peak RPM of 2400, that is a lot of air being moved, which does a great job of bringing down the temperature of the coolant in a water cooling loop.I personally, after trying two of these fans first, have replaced every single fan inside my case with either a ML120 or a ML140 Magnetic Levitation Fan. In my Corsair 900D computer case I now have five ML120's and a single ML140 (rear exhaust) case fans, all in the white version. Then there is three of the ML140's on my 420mm Radiator (40mm thick), for cooling the CPU and its Voltage Regulators (In the future just for pure cosmetic sake, i will add the DRAM water block to the loop). Last but not least, there are two ML120 fans on the front of a 280mm radiator with an additional two ML120 fans on the rear, as it is a 60mm thick radiator being used to cool a NVIDIA Titan X Pascal GPU.
jose
you read reveiws on how amazing these magnetic fans are.... I didnt believe them because it fel like an infomercial. But, let me tell you once you put these in your system you will not be able to siwtch back to any other type of fan. I even think im loosing weight just by having them by me when i sit at the computer.These are super fast, over 2000 RPMs, and so quiet is scary. Now if you know your system you will know that you never have these working at max, i have my sistem allways between 900 and 1300.... or at least thats what my PC tells me. I cannt tell the difference. they are so quiet and effective i can worry about everything else other than my PC starting shaking and moving on its own.And now for the fancy part.... the useless light.... its gorgeous. Its not like the old fans with a single led, these ones light up the system with a cool bright light its so pretty youo wont regret it. I bought only white because its lets me see feels alive. you will not regret the extra buck for the fany light.
lang redlang red
tl;dr Pretty nice fans. They're a relatively middle-ground in terms of noise and performance. Two years and going strong!So I'll admit, I was building a PC right when these first came out and of course I took a look at them. The RGB option wasn't out at the time, and you either bought red, white, blue, or non-led. I figured I wouldn't look at them, and ordered the non-led. Well lo-and-behold, they accidentally sent me the white led version instead and I wasn't going to tell anyone twice. Popped it in and man. Haven't looked back, even ordered two more when I built a new computer recently! I'd say performance-to-noise wise, they're slightly above average. Not the most air pressure, and not the noisiest at high RPM. Best of all though, they're reliable. Give 'em a shot!