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New Noctua heatsinks for Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids with fans up to 140mm


New Noctua heatsinks for Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids with fans up to 140mm



Yesterday the new Intel Xeon W for workstations and professionals that require processing power. With this launch, manufacturers are taking the opportunity to present their products, such as Noctua, which He has launched new heatsinks compatible with this LGA-4677 socket that carry these new Intel Xeon W. In total 4 models and an upgrade kit are available to be able to use previous models in this new LGA4677 socket.

Geeknetic New Noctua heatsinks for Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids with fans up to 140mm 1

The 4 models are divided into 2 larger ones, the NH-U14S DX-4677 and the NH-U12S DX-4677 which have 140 and 120 mm fans respectively and are of larger dimensions that are consistent with larger cases. The NH-U9 DX-4677 and NH-D9 DX-4677 4U have a smaller footprint that best matches the 4U format of servers and are compatible with 92mm fans. In addition, the latter can be used with different orientations to direct the flow to the air outlet of the box, as well as with motherboards that have double socket for a configuration with two of these fans.

Geeknetic New Noctua heatsinks for Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids with fans up to 140mm 2

The new mounting kit NM-i4677 will allow adapt the models of the DX-4189, DX-3647 and TR-SP3 series to this new platform. They include everything you need, including tools, to take advantage of your previous heatsink in this new generation of Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids processors.

Geeknetic New Noctua heatsinks for Intel Xeon Sapphire Rapids with fans up to 140mm 3

These new heatsinks are already available through the official Noctua store on Amazon and soon in authorized stores and distributors. The prices of these new heatsinks are €139.90 for larger models and €129.90 for the 2 smallest, the NM-i4677 kit has a cost of €29.90.

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Article Editor: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I gutted my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles that I write at Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, contemporary and retro, on the 20+ consoles I own, as well as my PC.

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