Chassis

Thermaltake Overseer RX-I Full Tower Case Review Review

Features and Specifications

The following are taken directly from Thermaltake.com’s Overseer RX-I product page.

 

 Pulsating lighting effect.
 E-sports gaming style front bezel.
 USB 3.0 SuperSpeed via internal 20 pin connector.
Top-mounted HDD Docking Station enables blazing fast file transfer and effortless hot-swap capability.
 Black coating makes stylish inside look.
 Bottom-placed PSU design for better and easier installation.
 Supports most advanced AMD & NVIDIA® graphic cards up to 12.5″/32cm
 

(e.g. —-AMD Radeon™ HD 6990 & nVidia® Geforce® GTX 590).

Nice of them to specify the maximum GPU length, 12.5″ is quite long as well.

The top mounted HDD dock is something I’m excited about, it ought to make transfering files between HDDs a lot easier!

 

Specifications

Case Type Full Tower
Material SECC
Front Bezel Material Combination of plastic and high air flow mesh
Color Interior: Black
Exterior: Black
Side Panel Solid with Transparent Window
Motherboard Support 9.6” x 9.6” (Micro ATX)
12” x 9.6” (ATX)
12” x 13” (Extend ATX)
Motherboard Tray No
5.25″ Drive Bay 3
Ext. 3.5″ Drive Bay By using 5.25″ to 3.5″ Converter
Int. 3.5″ Drive Bay 5
Expansion Slots 8
Front I/O Ports USB 3.0 x 2 (via internal header)
USB 2.0 x 2
eSATA connector x 1
Mic & Speaker (support AC’97 & HD Audio)
Cooling System


– Front (intake) :
200 x 200 x 30 mm Blue LED (600~800 RPM, 12~14 dBA)

– Rear (exhaust) :
120 x 120 x 25 mm TurboFan, 1000rpm, 16dBA

– Top(exhaust) :
200 x 200 x 30 mm Blue LED fan x 1 (600~800rpm, 13~15dBA)
2 x  200 x 200 x 30 mm (optional)

– Bottom(intake) :
120 x 120 x 25 mm x 1 (optional)

– Side(intake) :
200 x 200 x 30 mm x 1 (optional)

Liquid Cooling Capable Yes
Liquid Cooling Embedded No
Power Supply Supported Standard ATX PSII Power Supply
Power Supply Included No
Dimension (H*W*D) 535 x 220 x 580 mm
21.1 x 8.7 x 22.8 inch
Net Weight 10.3 kg
22.7 lb
Security Lock For Peripherals Only
Application Suitable for gaming, enthusiast, DIY and modding

Don’t see many external 3.5″ bays anymore, it’s kind of refreshing to see one.

I’m not sure a fan that runs ~1000rpm is quite worthy of being called a “turbo” fan, though the blade design is fantastic.

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