Most laptop cooling pads share the same fundamental design flaw: their fans blow air against the bottom of your laptop's plastic shell, hoping some of it finds an intake vent. The llano V12 Ultra doesn't play that game. It uses a memory foam ring that creates an airtight seal against your laptop's underside, then forces filtered air through a 5.5-inch centrifugal fan directly into the actual intake vents.


Tech Closet ran FurMark stress tests on an Acer Nitro 5 and measured 20°C drops in both CPU and GPU temperatures at max fan speed. Even at the V12 Ultra's lowest 300 RPM setting, temps dropped over 10°C. Salem Techsperts pushed it harder with AIDA64 on a ThinkPad P1 Gen 6, watching temperatures fall from a throttling 98°C down to a comfortable 72°C. In a Serious Sam 4 benchmark, the same laptop jumped from 124.2 FPS to 170.6 FPS with the V12 maxed out.
The Ultra variant adds a software suite (Myth.cool, Windows only) that reads your CPU and GPU temperatures in real-time and auto-adjusts the fan curve. Three preset modes handle everything from silent browsing to all-out gaming without touching the controls. A removable dust filter catches pet hair and debris before it reaches your laptop's heatsinks. Three USB 3.0 ports turn the stand into a basic hub.
Salem Techsperts tested the V12 Ultra's build by physically abusing it on camera to prove the plastic housing can take a beating. They also highlighted llano's 2.5-year warranty and what they called a "customer first mindset." The V12 Ultra requires its own 36W power brick, so it won't work off laptop USB power alone.
What It Won't Do
At maximum 2800 RPM, the fan hits 70 dB. That's vacuum cleaner territory. Both Tech Closet and Salem Techsperts agreed: you'll want noise-canceling headphones if you run it wide open. The fold-out legs also lack rubber grips, so the stand slides around on smooth desks when you push against it. And forget packing it in a bag. This thing is a permanent desk fixture.
The Havit HV-F2056 has sat near the top of Amazon's laptop cooling pad bestseller list for years, and at $28 it's hard to argue with the price. Three 110mm fans spin behind a metal mesh surface, folding legs give you two height options, and the whole thing runs off laptop USB power with no external brick required.


At 1.1 inches thick and 1.5 pounds, the Havit is genuinely portable in a way that the 70 dB llano never will be. You can toss it in a backpack without thinking about it. Two USB pass-through ports let you keep a mouse or other accessory connected.
The real value isn't the cooling, which is mediocre at best. The Havit's strength is basic ergonomic elevation at a price point where you don't feel guilty buying one for every room in the house. For thin ultrabooks that don't generate extreme heat, the gentle airflow and raised typing angle are good enough.
What It Won't Do
Tech Closet's thermal benchmarks exposed the Havit's core weakness: in FurMark and Cyberpunk tests, it dropped GPU temperature by exactly 1°C. It performed identically to a $5 dollar store cooling pad because two of its three fans blow against solid plastic on the laptop chassis rather than intake vents. If your laptop has thermal problems, the Havit will not fix them. The plastic bottom also flexes under heavier gaming laptops.
Who Should Buy Which
llano V12 Ultra
20°C temperature drops with a sealed turbo fan system
- You own a gaming laptop or workstation that thermal throttles under load
- Your laptop has bottom-mounted intake vents (most gaming laptops do; MacBooks don't)
- You have a permanent desk setup and never need to travel with your stand
- You're comfortable with fan noise up to 70 dB or already wear headphones while gaming
- You want a built-in USB 3.0 hub and removable dust filter to protect your laptop long-term
Havit HV-F2056
The $28 Amazon bestseller that keeps your laptop cool enough
- You use a thin ultrabook or MacBook that gets warm but doesn't throttle
- Your budget is under $30 and you just want basic ergonomic elevation
- You want something light enough to carry between rooms or toss in a backpack
- You don't want to deal with an external power brick, the Havit runs off USB
- You need a simple, reliable cooling pad with thousands of verified Amazon reviews