Exterior
The whole chassis measures 486mm (H) x 490mm (L) x 239mm (W) in dimensions, which is large enough to support all the latest ITX/M-ATX/ATX/E-ATX motherboards, including reverse connector motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte and MSI.
You’ll find a tempered glass panel for the left side, while top and right side panels feature a fully mesh design with a 3D Y-pattern. It’s optimized for high airflow and provides low-obstruction path for cool air.
The front I/O panel includes a Power Button, USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C Port, 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports, and a combination audio/microphone jack. Oddly, there’s no reset switch.
Interior
There’s loads of room inside the chassis and you can easily mount dual 360mm radiators, one on the top and one in the front of the chassis. Plus you can install up to 10 x 120mm or 7 x 140mm fans for additional cooling.
You can fit a PSU with a maximum size of up to 225mm. We used the Corsair RM1000x SHIFT 80 PLUS Gold, which measured 180mm in length.
The chassis is capable of supporting a full size graphic cards with a maximum length of 430mm. For our PC build, we used a Radeon RX 7900 XT graphics card (which takes up 2.5 PCIE slot space and measures 330mm in length) with no issues at all. We also tried a GeForce RTX 4080 Super (3 slot card) to see if it fitted … it did. So all is good.
The Corsar FRAME 4000D RS ARGB case supports all the latest ATX motherboards, including reverse connector motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte and MSI.These new types of motherboards feature connectors for power, USB, fan headers, etc on the reverse/back side, making the whole system look nice and clean with no “visible” cables in the front.
Closer Look
For storage, you can install up to 2 x 2.5″ SSDs and 2 x 3.5″ HDDs at the back of the chassis. Other nice touches includes the cable shroud to keep unused cables out of sight, giving you a clean and organized interior. There’s also a load of velcro straps inside the case for cable management, plus you get a GPU anti-sag stabilization arm to keep your graphics card nice and steady.
During the PC build, we recommend you remove the tempered glass side panel completely. The last thing you want is to have your tempered glass cracked or scratched during installation.