Installation
During our installation, we used a Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Pro X motherboard. Everything fitted nicely inside the chassis with plenty of room for connecting the 24-pin ATX power cables, USB, audio and other cables.
We also fitted the Thermaltake TH360 V2 Ultra AIO cooler on the top of the chassis. No issues here and everything fitted perfectly.
We mounted the AIO with the tubing on the left (personal prefrence) because I didn’t want the tubing to block access to my ram.
The chassis has a clearance of up to 365mm for the GPU, and luckily the the Gigabyte GeForce RTX 4070 Ti which used for our build measures 330mm in length, and it fits nicely with plenty of room to spare.
It was a pleasure to work within the dual chamber, as it offers plenty of room for installing the PSU and connecting all those power cables.
For cable management, the included velcro straps was rally helped in tidying all those messy looking cables.
The Finished Item
Here’s our completed build. Doesn’t it look stunning? 😀
Becasue the front glass panel isn’t removeable, you won’t be able to fit a distro-plate or mount an AIO in the front. Besides, the whole point of having this chassis is to have an unobstucted view of the insides of the chassis 😀
The tool-less design of the chassis allows me to access the insides with ease, and this is something really like.
The angled fans really help with cooling and you can really feel the air flow when the system is powered up. The only thing I wished they included are some RGB fans instead 😛
For additional cooling, you can install an extra 120mm fan at the back of the chassis and 2 more 140mm fans on the botom.
2 comments
Put con for non rgb fans when the case has an rgb version lol
We love RGB 😆