The Thermalright TR TY-140 140mm x 160mm PWM Fan is a large fan that can be used for many applications. It has a standard 120mm fan hole mounting pattern so this fan can be mounted on any standard 120 fan bracket. The fan comes with Enhanced Hyper-Flow Bearing (EHFB) so you are ensured consistent and stable RPM while providing a lifetime of usage. The seven silent torpedo blades give a very quiet and efficient airflow making this a great selection for CPU coolers.
Note: This fans frame is larger than standard 120mm fans, please check proper clearance before purchasing.
Total Reviews: 4
Average Rating: 
great fan for 120mm case holes
07-23-2011
Reviewer: cool n quiet (2)
Moves more air than previous 120mm case fan and stays quiet with 4-pin PWM control. I use it as a VGA cooler connected to my ASUS Sabertooth 990FX MB on the side of my Antec 300 case and it works great!
Great exhaust, good intake
04-22-2011
Reviewer: Sean C (5)
I bought this to put in my CM 690II Advanced in order to make it into a positive pressure cooling setup (to keep dust out). It''s currently taking in air at the bottom of the case, connected to a fan controller running at probably 600RPM. It''s inaudible under the sound of my Radeon 5770 Vapor-X''s fan idling.
You will want a fan controller or an extra fan plug on your motherboard if this fan will be pulling air through a filter, because it gets obnoxiously loud at full speed. If you''re using it as an exhaust fan, though, you can only hear air moving even at full speed.
Best Noise/Airflow Ratio w/ minor issue
01-13-2011
Reviewer: pocketdrummer (1)
This 140mm fan has the best noise/airflow ratio of the bunch. The closest is thermalright''s X-Silent 140 fan. The only issue with the fan is that it only mounts to 120mm holes unlike it''s competitor, Noctua (mounts to both). Also note that the fan is thicker than the standard 140mm x 25mm. Clearance issues may arise. If these two issues aren''t a problem for you, it''s the best you can get.
Great Fan
11-19-2010
Reviewer: skypine27 (3)
Like it alot. Moves a lot of air (as advertised) and is quiet too (as advertisded).
The fan unit itself is silent, the airflow it creates generates the noise.
I run it on a 3 pin header at full RPM. Again, all you hear is the airflow.
A tad bit ugly, but my case isn''t open for show anyway. A bit hard to cram inside a small case too.