

❄️ Cool in silence, shine in style — elevate your PC game!
The Thermalright TL-C12CW-S X3 is a set of three 120mm ARGB PWM fans designed for silent, efficient cooling with a max speed of 1550RPM and airflow of 66.17 CFM. Featuring durable S-FDB bearings and 17 customizable lighting modes, these fans offer quiet operation at just 25.6 dBA while enhancing your PC’s aesthetics. Ideal for cases, radiators, and CPU coolers, they come with extended 55cm cables for flexible installation and motherboard synchronization.






| ASIN | B0BKJWMQLW |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | #10,681 in Computers ( See Top 100 in Computers ) #65 in Computer Case Fans |
| Brand | Thermalright |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (669) |
| Date First Available | 9 December 2022 |
| Item Weight | 472 g |
| Item model number | TL-C12CW-S X3 D6 |
| Manufacturer | Thermalright |
| Product Dimensions | 11.99 x 11.99 x 2.49 cm; 472 g |
| Voltage | 12 Volts |
| Wattage | 3.6 watts |
P**A
Muy lindos y silenciosos. No se les notan los leds como otros ventiladotes argb, y el blanco es muy neutro.
M**.
The best fans
M**K
Los colores son muy vistosos excelente
M**E
I decided to try out a full compliment of Thermalright products in a "new" full rebuild of my system after having spent the past year or so using the Thermalright Peerless assassin tower cooler (hailed as one of the greatest air coolers ever, often very close to the performance of the king NHD15) with great results. I am very impressed with the value proposition from Thermalright products. They are extremely affordable and extremely effective, especially when considering the cost. These fans and the 360AIO I put in my system on this rebuild are happily operating my system in a Cinebench R23 run with a 5 degree drop in CPU temp and overall multi-threaded score of 34326 at stock CPU settings with the exact same fan and radiator size configuration and BIOS settings. Literally all I did was take all the old stuff out, drop in the new stuff and power it on. I did not change settings in BIOS or fan curves whatsoever. For reference, this setup replaced a full Corsair kit, complete with Corsair 360AIO. Hands down this system is beating the brakes off of the Corsair setup, with less plugs and wires, no software needed, and simple plug and play operation, at a fraction of the cost. I bought the Thermalright equipment for the entire build for less than the cost of JUST the Corsair AIO, which I will be returning. I have watched numerous product reviews on Thermalright components and the number one concern brought up is always longevity and warranty support, although nobody seems to have had to post a video about any of these AIOs giving up on them yet that I have seen. Since my last Thermalright cooler was an air-cooled tower, I cannot make a fair comparison here, but I can offer that even if this AIO dies, I can replace it 4-5 times and still come in at a lower cost than the Corsair AIO. I truly hope that I don't need to do that, but even if I did, it would be cheaper, still plug and play, and still no software issues or bugs, which warms my little heart. Fan noise is a very subjective thing here in my opinion. I am running them at full speed during benchmarks for maximum cooling and yes you can hear them, sure they are "loud," but not nearly as loud as the Cosairs were, and on top of it, the tone is much less annoying. When lowering the fan profile to a "silent" configuration for casual use and gaming, they are nearly inaudible in my house. I don't know what my noise floor is in my house, but we do have kids and dogs and a TV running all the time, and hard flooring, so it is probably noisier in my house than most other's homes. That said, even when these fans begin to ramp up, I still don't hear them over all of that. I only hear them when I max them out. They have not had to ramp up that high during normal use, so unless I do it manually, it is literally of zero concern to me and I think you will have a similar experience. I know big name reviewers with decibel meters and controlled environments for testing can speak in much more detail with evidence here on the topic, but frankly, that is not how most of us live, probably. Overall, I think noise will not be an issue for you. If you are coming from Corsair like I did, they are quieter in the same configuration. I know that much. The tone is better as well whenever they do begin to ramp. The lighting is great. They can get painfully bright if you want to. I have mine dimmed down so I have a splash of color without going blind. They are decently diffused. I have seen better, but at much higher cost. Sadly, I have also seen WORSE at higher cost. Overall, lighting performance is great. They do not have rings or side lighting, which I know if very popular currently, but I personally don't care for that feature. Only the fan blade light up on these, and I like it a lot. The frame of the fan does a good enough job to reflect or highlight the light to provide a clean and crisp look. Construction is sturdy and gives me no impression of weakness. Anti vibration pads are built into the frame and present on both sides which is very nice. The included screws are very minimalistic and won't stand out or make your build look like it was bolted together with garbage hardware. Very slim and sleek hardware here. The bite of the screws into the material is firm and positive, without being so tight that you need to use any force to seat them. If you are on the fence about Thermalright, get off the fence and jump on board. Save yourself a TON of money, get stuff that works amazing, looks amazing, and doesn't lock you into a hot garbage software eco-system.
A**R
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