Standing screen display size | 121 Centimeters |
---|---|
Wireless Type | 802.11a |
Corsair CO-9050007-WW Air Series SP120 High Performance Edition Single Fan
Enhance your purchase
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.23 x 8.58 x 1.77 inches |
Brand | Corsair |
Power Connector Type | 3-Pin |
Voltage | 12 Volts |
Cooling Method | Air |
Compatible Devices | Radiator |
Noise Level | 35 dB |
Material | Rubber |
Maximum Rotational Speed | 2350 RPM |
Air Flow Capacity | 62.74 Cubic Feet Per Minute |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- Fan Size 120mm x 25mm
- Noise (dBA) 35 dBA
- Airflow (CFM) 62.74 CFM
- Static Pressure (mm/H2O) 3.1 mm/H2O
- 2350 rpm
- Power Draw (@ +12V) .18A
- Three colored rings in red, blue, and white.
- 2 Year Warranty
Buy it with
- +
- +
More to consider from our brands
- AXE MEMORY 256GB NVMe M.2 2280 PCIe Gen 3x4 Internal SSD Solid State Drive (SSD)Amazon's Choicein Internal Solid State Drives
Videos
Videos for related products
0:42
Click to play video
Premium Magnetic Levitation Cooling Fan
Merchant Video
Videos for related products
0:35
Click to play video
These fans are SUPER quiet and I love the LED lights!
Kevin - Entertaining Entropy
Videos for related products
0:45
Click to play video
Corsair AF ELITE Fans Trailer - New Champion of Cooling
Corsair
Videos for related products
0:28
Click to play video
Antec Storm 120mm PWM Performance Case Fan
Antec Direct
Videos for related products
0:48
Click to play video
Corsair ML120 RGB
Merchant Video
Videos for related products
6:16
Click to play video
Works Great For Fan & RGB Control For Corsair Fans
No Shame Income
Videos for related products
0:44
Click to play video
Corsair QL Series, RGB LED Fan
Merchant Video
Product information
Technical Details
Brand | Corsair |
---|---|
Item model number | CO-9050007-WW |
Item Weight | 7.1 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 5.23 x 8.58 x 1.77 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.23 x 8.58 x 1.77 inches |
Voltage | 12 Volts |
Manufacturer | Corsair |
ASIN | B007RESFVI |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | April 15, 2012 |
Additional Information
Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars |
---|---|
Best Sellers Rank | #4,354 in Computer Case Fans |
Warranty & Support
Feedback
Product Description
From the Manufacturer
The advanced design of the SP120 provides the higher static pressure that radiators and heatsinks demand, while maintaining a quiet noise profile. Seven ultra-wide, custom-molded blades deliver high static pressure, and the customized fan enclosure helps airflow move in the right direction. The rubber mounts and the advanced hydraulic bearing system combine high reliability with low-noise operation. Three included colored rings allow you to customize the look of the fan to match the rest of your hardware.
The wide body, low-pitch blades are custom-molded for high static pressure air delivery with low noise, while rubber corners reduce vibration and noise.High Static Pressure for Efficient Cooling on Radiators or Heatsinks
Cooling todayβs high-performance PCs is a complex task, and a single fan design canβt meet every need. The fan you use to exhaust hot air out of your case might not be the best fan to mount flush against a heatsink or radiator.
Static pressure is the measure of how well a fan can push air in this type of highly restrictive environment, and this is where the SP120 excels. Itβs an ideal solution for radiator and heatsink use, as well as drive bay intakes, and other locations where youβre mounting a fan directly adjacent to a heat source.
For high-volume cooling in less restrictive environments, like case exhaust or side intakes, check out our AF series of high-volume fans.
Technical Specifications
Package contents
- SP120 High Performance Edition Fan
- Three colored rings in red, blue, and white
- Mounting Screws
- Voltage step-down adapter for lower speed operation
System requirements
- Motherboard with a standard 3-pin fan connector
Air Series Performance
AF120 Performance Edition
AF120 Performance Edition Twin Pack
AF120 Quiet Edition
AF120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack
AF140 Quiet Edition
SP120 High Performance Edition
SP120 High Performance Edition Twin Pack
SP120 Quiet Edition
SP120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Size 120mm x 25mm 120mm x 25mm 140mm x 25mm 120mm x 25mm 120mm x 25mm Operating Voltage 7V-12V 7V-12V 7V-12V 7V-12V 7V-12V Performance at 12V Airflow 63.47 CFM 39.88 CFM 67.80 CFM 62.74 CFM 37.85 CFM Static Pressure 1.1mm/H20 0.5mm/H20 0.84mm/H20 3.1mm/H20 1.29mm/H20 Sound Level 30 dBA 21 dBA 24 dBA 35 dBA 23 dBA Speed 1650 RPM 1100 RPM 1150 RPM 2350 RPM 1450 RPM Power Draw 0.13 A 0.08 A 0.10 A 0.18 A 0.08 A
Product guides and documents
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we donβt use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon
Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2012
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
You can find out all the technical details about Corsair fans at the Corsair website (Products, Cooling, Air Series Fans). There are two lines of fans: the "Performance Edition" fans and the "Quiet Edition" fans. As these names imply, the former have higher air flows while the later operate more quietly (at lower air flows).
There are two "Quiet Edition" models: the AF model and the SP model. The AF model is used when air flow is unrestricted (such as the exhaust fan at the back of the case); the SP model is used when air flow is restricted (such as air flow through drive bays or through a radiator/cooler).
The AF120 and the SP120 are 120 mm fans while the AF140 is a 140 mm fan: Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050001-WW) , Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050005-WW) , Corsair Air Series AF140 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050009-WW) . The AF120 and SP120 are also sold in "twin packs": Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050002-WW) , Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050006-WW) .
There are some really great review videos for the Corsair fans on a popular video website. The review on the TastyPC channel was particularly helpful to me, since it quite clearly compared the air flows and noise levels of the various fans. I made the decision to buy the "Quiet Edition" fans based on that video. The CorsairMemoreyInc channel also has good video reviews.
Each fan comes with: three color rings in red, white, and blue (these are very easy to swap without tools); a voltage step-down adapter; and four fan screws.
The voltage step-down adapter (which looks like a short extension cable) reduces voltage to the fan from 12 VDC to 7 VDC. This voltage reduction lowers fan speed and air flow, resulting in further noise reduction. If your system can be adequately cooled with the fan operating at 7 VDC, you might want to install the step-down adapter to achieve even lower noise levels. Be sure to monitor your temperatures with the CPU and video card at maximum use.
The only thing I do not like about these fans is that the provided fan screws are not wide enough: the screw heads can slip through the screw holes in the Corsair Vengeance C70 case. I secured most of the fans with screws that were used with the original "stock" fans.
I recently built a new desktop-style computer using the Corsair C70 case and the Corsair Hydro Series H100 Extreme Performance Liquid CPU Cooler (CWCH100) . The C70 case comes with three stock fans; the H100 CPU cooler comes with two stock fans for the radiator. Although the Corsair "stock" fans are very good, I decided to replace the three case fans and the two H100 fans with "Quiet Edition" fans.
In my Corsair Vengeance C70 case, I:
- replaced the stock fan at the exhaust with an AF120 "Quiet Edition" fan,
- removed the front center drive bay (to reduce air flow obstruction) and replaced the stock fan with an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan mounted outside of the case as a supply fan (these changes maximize air flow to the video card),
- replaced the remaining drive bay's stock fan with an SP120 "Quiet Edition" fan as a supply fan,
- replaced the two stock fans on the H100 CPU cooler with two SP120 "Quiet Edition" fans as exhaust fans, and
- installed an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan in the side panel as a supply fan.
As advertised, these "Quiet Edition" fans are very, very quiet in operation, and they are keeping the CPU, motherboard, and case temperatures very low. I disconnected the AF140 fan in the side panel because it is not needed.
If you are on a budget, you might want to keep the stock fans that come with your case and CPU cooler. Those fans are somewhat noisier; but they have really great performance curves. I just wanted to experiment with the "Quiet Edition" fans; I am glad I used them for this build. I really appreciate the lower noise levels and the air flows are more than adequate (CPU and case temperatures are low). I highly recommend these fans.
You can find out all the technical details about Corsair fans at the Corsair website (Products, Cooling, Air Series Fans). There are two lines of fans: the "Performance Edition" fans and the "Quiet Edition" fans. As these names imply, the former have higher air flows while the later operate more quietly (at lower air flows).
There are two "Quiet Edition" models: the AF model and the SP model. The AF model is used when air flow is unrestricted (such as the exhaust fan at the back of the case); the SP model is used when air flow is restricted (such as air flow through drive bays or through a radiator/cooler).
The AF120 and the SP120 are 120 mm fans while the AF140 is a 140 mm fan: Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050001-WW) , Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050005-WW) , Corsair Air Series AF140 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050009-WW) . The AF120 and SP120 are also sold in "twin packs": Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050002-WW) , Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050006-WW) .
There are some really great review videos for the Corsair fans on a popular video website. The review on the TastyPC channel was particularly helpful to me, since it quite clearly compared the air flows and noise levels of the various fans. I made the decision to buy the "Quiet Edition" fans based on that video. The CorsairMemoreyInc channel also has good video reviews.
Each fan comes with: three color rings in red, white, and blue (these are very easy to swap without tools); a voltage step-down adapter; and four fan screws.
The voltage step-down adapter (which looks like a short extension cable) reduces voltage to the fan from 12 VDC to 7 VDC. This voltage reduction lowers fan speed and air flow, resulting in further noise reduction. If your system can be adequately cooled with the fan operating at 7 VDC, you might want to install the step-down adapter to achieve even lower noise levels. Be sure to monitor your temperatures with the CPU and video card at maximum use.
The only thing I do not like about these fans is that the provided fan screws are not wide enough: the screw heads can slip through the screw holes in the Corsair Vengeance C70 case. I secured most of the fans with screws that were used with the original "stock" fans.
I recently built a new desktop-style computer using the Corsair C70 case and the Corsair Hydro Series H100 Extreme Performance Liquid CPU Cooler (CWCH100) . The C70 case comes with three stock fans; the H100 CPU cooler comes with two stock fans for the radiator. Although the Corsair "stock" fans are very good, I decided to replace the three case fans and the two H100 fans with "Quiet Edition" fans.
In my Corsair Vengeance C70 case, I:
- replaced the stock fan at the exhaust with an AF120 "Quiet Edition" fan,
- removed the front center drive bay (to reduce air flow obstruction) and replaced the stock fan with an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan mounted outside of the case as a supply fan (these changes maximize air flow to the video card),
- replaced the remaining drive bay's stock fan with an SP120 "Quiet Edition" fan as a supply fan,
- replaced the two stock fans on the H100 CPU cooler with two SP120 "Quiet Edition" fans as exhaust fans, and
- installed an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan in the side panel as a supply fan.
As advertised, these "Quiet Edition" fans are very, very quiet in operation, and they are keeping the CPU, motherboard, and case temperatures very low. I disconnected the AF140 fan in the side panel because it is not needed.
If you are on a budget, you might want to keep the stock fans that come with your case and CPU cooler. Those fans are somewhat noisier; but they have really great performance curves. I just wanted to experiment with the "Quiet Edition" fans; I am glad I used them for this build. I really appreciate the lower noise levels and the air flows are more than adequate (CPU and case temperatures are low). I highly recommend these fans.

Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on October 26, 2012
You can find out all the technical details about Corsair fans at the Corsair website (Products, Cooling, Air Series Fans). There are two lines of fans: the "Performance Edition" fans and the "Quiet Edition" fans. As these names imply, the former have higher air flows while the later operate more quietly (at lower air flows).
There are two "Quiet Edition" models: the AF model and the SP model. The AF model is used when air flow is unrestricted (such as the exhaust fan at the back of the case); the SP model is used when air flow is restricted (such as air flow through drive bays or through a radiator/cooler).
The AF120 and the SP120 are 120 mm fans while the AF140 is a 140 mm fan: [[ASIN:B007RESG3A Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050001-WW)]], [[ASIN:B007RESFM2 Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050005-WW)]], [[ASIN:B007RESGGC Corsair Air Series AF140 Quiet Edition Single Fan (CO-9050009-WW)]]. The AF120 and SP120 are also sold in "twin packs": [[ASIN:B007RESG7G Corsair Air Series AF120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050002-WW)]], [[ASIN:B007RESFR2 Corsair Air Series SP120 Quiet Edition Twin Pack Fan (CO-9050006-WW)]].
There are some really great review videos for the Corsair fans on a popular video website. The review on the TastyPC channel was particularly helpful to me, since it quite clearly compared the air flows and noise levels of the various fans. I made the decision to buy the "Quiet Edition" fans based on that video. The CorsairMemoreyInc channel also has good video reviews.
Each fan comes with: three color rings in red, white, and blue (these are very easy to swap without tools); a voltage step-down adapter; and four fan screws.
The voltage step-down adapter (which looks like a short extension cable) reduces voltage to the fan from 12 VDC to 7 VDC. This voltage reduction lowers fan speed and air flow, resulting in further noise reduction. If your system can be adequately cooled with the fan operating at 7 VDC, you might want to install the step-down adapter to achieve even lower noise levels. Be sure to monitor your temperatures with the CPU and video card at maximum use.
The only thing I do not like about these fans is that the provided fan screws are not wide enough: the screw heads can slip through the screw holes in the Corsair Vengeance C70 case. I secured most of the fans with screws that were used with the original "stock" fans.
I recently built a new desktop-style computer using the Corsair C70 case and the [[ASIN:B0051U7HMS Corsair Hydro Series H100 Extreme Performance Liquid CPU Cooler (CWCH100)]]. The C70 case comes with three stock fans; the H100 CPU cooler comes with two stock fans for the radiator. Although the Corsair "stock" fans are very good, I decided to replace the three case fans and the two H100 fans with "Quiet Edition" fans.
In my Corsair Vengeance C70 case, I:
- replaced the stock fan at the exhaust with an AF120 "Quiet Edition" fan,
- removed the front center drive bay (to reduce air flow obstruction) and replaced the stock fan with an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan mounted outside of the case as a supply fan (these changes maximize air flow to the video card),
- replaced the remaining drive bay's stock fan with an SP120 "Quiet Edition" fan as a supply fan,
- replaced the two stock fans on the H100 CPU cooler with two SP120 "Quiet Edition" fans as exhaust fans, and
- installed an AF140 "Quiet Edition" fan in the side panel as a supply fan.
As advertised, these "Quiet Edition" fans are very, very quiet in operation, and they are keeping the CPU, motherboard, and case temperatures very low. I disconnected the AF140 fan in the side panel because it is not needed.
If you are on a budget, you might want to keep the stock fans that come with your case and CPU cooler. Those fans are somewhat noisier; but they have really great performance curves. I just wanted to experiment with the "Quiet Edition" fans; I am glad I used them for this build. I really appreciate the lower noise levels and the air flows are more than adequate (CPU and case temperatures are low). I highly recommend these fans.

Top reviews from other countries

Now some independent youtube reviewers have pointed out that with the Noctuas mounted to a rad, they cool the CPU better than the Corsairs by a margin of 3-4'C max. I currently have an overclock on my i7 4790k at 4.7ghz on all cores at 1.2v adaptive. With the h100i GTX and the Corsairs, I hit a max temp of 81'C after an hour on Prime95v26.6 on the small fft test. Yes, that's quite high but when you consider 1. The all core high overclock without custom loops 2. the duration of the small FFT test during UK summer ambient temps and 3. the silent setup of my system...a 3-4'c improvement for some noise wasn't appealing to me. This is because 81'C is within the thermal limit that this CPU can handle, so long as it is not sustaining this high temp for long periods of time.
In Battlefield 4 online multiplayer, my CPU temps stay in the mid 50's, skimming the high 40s on the low end and 61'C at the highest end. The noisiest part of my system is actually my GPU, 980TI that only wakes up during gaming. Other than it, I wish I could shut up that Corsair h100i pump that everybody knows about.
I would not recommend any other fan other than these Corsairs, despite still using the Noctua NF-F12s, a Noctua AF 140mm fan and a pair of Noctua's IndustrialPPC 3000RPM fans. If you want silence, and second best cooling in this category of static pressure fans, get these Corsair quiet edition fans. They cost less too!

To put things into perspective, I'm running an MSI AMD R9 390x gpu inside the NZXT Razr h440 case. During graphic intensive games like Fallout 4 and the Witcher 3, the GPU temperature would stick at 94c with no movement, despite the Twin Frozr's best efforts to cool things down. I suspected that the cause was the ambient hot air being pushed around inside the case, rather than being sucked out. So, I swapped out the rubbish exhaust and front fans supplied with this case with 3 of these bad boys at the front, and one Corsair AF140 at the back, exhaust position. The effect this had was instantly noticeable from the start- the amount of air these fans can push through the case is unbelievable. Now, my GPU running temps rarely go above 80c at maximum stress (typically stay around 75c in a cool, well ventilated room). The AMD R9 390x is a hot card, so this airflow upgrade was a must, and even gave me a bit of headroom for slight GPU overclocking.
The only aspects of these fans that I don't like are the noise at full RPM and the stupid rubber mounting holes. You can't screw these in, unless you have bolts that can go straight through the holes, so don't bother using the screws supplied. The fans are quite low when being worked, but are generally quiet if at mind to low RPM. If your motherboard doesn't have 3/4 pin fan headers, invest in a fan controller because the sound will drive you mad if you're just web-browsing or doing a bit of work while these are spinning at max. There are silent versions, but I doubt their as effective as these for providing strong air flow. I would suggest configuring these fans to spool up dependent on GPU temperature using SpeedFan. Idle speeds will be suffice at cooling the rest of your system, providing you have a decent CPU cooler, you'll only really need maximum performance if your fans are obstructed by drive mounts or, like me, have a hot graphics card.
All-in-all, excellent fans.

A note for those considering purchasing:
These fans are better suited for a placement against hard drive bays, radiators on water cooling loops, and CPU coolers. Please consider placement before making purchase as the AF120mm fans may be better suited for your desired use.
I purchase these to replace the alternate models that come stock on the Corsair H100i AiO loop. Straight away I can tell a different in the volume levels and acoustics after installing these fans, and even at 100% speed through Corsair Link they are still noticeably quieter than the stock fans.
The rings are a great part of the aesthetic and can easily be swapped out. A lot of enthusiast builders have been known to respray them to match the aesthetic of their rig.
These fans are great for cooling efficiency, aesthetics, and nice and low on the dB meter. A definite recommendation from me to anyone looking to give their computer a nice new kick, and perfect if you like your case window with none of these fancy lighting setups.


Reviewed in the United Kingdom π¬π§ on November 23, 2016
A note for those considering purchasing:
These fans are better suited for a placement against hard drive bays, radiators on water cooling loops, and CPU coolers. Please consider placement before making purchase as the AF120mm fans may be better suited for your desired use.
I purchase these to replace the alternate models that come stock on the Corsair H100i AiO loop. Straight away I can tell a different in the volume levels and acoustics after installing these fans, and even at 100% speed through Corsair Link they are still noticeably quieter than the stock fans.
The rings are a great part of the aesthetic and can easily be swapped out. A lot of enthusiast builders have been known to respray them to match the aesthetic of their rig.
These fans are great for cooling efficiency, aesthetics, and nice and low on the dB meter. A definite recommendation from me to anyone looking to give their computer a nice new kick, and perfect if you like your case window with none of these fancy lighting setups.



Its a Corsair, so you expect quality, and it is. Don't hesitate, go for it, its well worth the slightly extra cost. Penny-pinching on fans and cooling is counter productive. If you have a powerful machine, good quality fans - not manufacturer stock fans - are a must, and this fits the bill perfectly. There is a marked, significant improvement in cooling ability over stock fans.
Nice One Corsair ...... :)