It baffles me why anyone would think it acceptable to market a PC case as a "gaming case" in 2009 and STILL not make allowances for 10.5" graphics cards!
How long has it been since the release of the GeForce 8800 GTX? Nearly 2 1/2 years? How in the world can a company think that a "gaming case" doesn't need to comfortably fit a 10.5" card??? And, you know, there are already some 11" cards out now. It doesn't take a crystal ball to see that high-end graphics cards will likely only get longer, not shorter, as time goes on. As it is, ATI and NVIDIA could use even more space for their cards for better cooling, power management, etc., but they must keep the length down as much as possible because most of the cases out there cannot handle longer cards. So why are NEW gaming cases being manufactured that are still not made for these longer cards?
Everyone who wants a high-end GPU doesn't necessarily want or need a full tower case. It's silly to have to get a case that has massive unused vertical space just so you can make use of its horizontal space. How difficult could it be to design a mid-tower case that adds an additional 3" or so front-to-back over the standard (obsolete) dimensions? Or does everyone really believe that the days of long graphics cards are a passing fad?
Repeatedly I see these case reviews that continue to ignore the NZXT Tempest. 3x120mm in, 1x120mm out back, 2x140mm up top. This thing moves a LOT of air and is very quiet. I'd like to see it comapred against some other cases for a change...
I use an Antec 900 original, the Mk2 looks great, maybe not worth the hassle of undoing all my cable management and everything to swap to a new case but I do have some complaints about the testing
I think your average person who will be building a Tri-SLI rig with 9 hard drives is going to be looking for a much larger case than this personally, I just dont see them picking this one
Now then, I have 4 HDDs and a 8800GTS 512 in there, Yes, its a bit tight, but I've found a lot of cases to be just as bad that are going to fit where I want my case to be
Air filters? My case stays pretty damn clean because its up off the floor....
The Stacker was too tall for my desk, i couldnt reach the power button or anything else, and i hate having my case on the floor for dust reasons, I chose the 900 and loved it so much i bought 2 :)
I think case reviews on a lot of review web sites in general need better lab conditions.
They have the nerve to often start reviews talking about how cases and PSU choice is often over looked by consumers but when you try to look at the reviews they don't put much effort in them selves!
I would like to see *all* case reviews performed in a professional hosting state of the art environment, I have been to a lot of data centers and gone through their tours, they always talk about how the temperature is always with in 1 degree and the humidity is at a exact percent.
If the humidity is changing for every case review even if the room temperature is the same it is still going to make a huge difference in the thermal performance tests.
No case revuiew should ever be considered complete without having installed and photographed oversized PSU like PC Power and Coolings 1KW-SR or similar. How well would one fit in this chasis?
No case revuiew should ever be considered complete without having installed and photographed oversized PSU like PC Power and Coolings 1KW-SR or similar. How well would one fit in this chasis?
I just put together an i7 build using this case and I'd rate it as about average to good for price paid. If it comes down to $100 then it would be a good case for money assuming you like how it looks.
Pros include excellent cooling, fairly quiet for amount of fans, excellent airflow, ease of putting the system together and at least the case I got didn't have any build quality issues or cosmetic problems. Everything works. The review didn't mention it but it does have a cable management system with several holes cut out and plenty of room for a lot of cables on the side (had no problems putting the side panel down) and they do include some cable ties on the other side of the case for this as well. Dust filters are now included which is nice and I think it looks fine.
Cons include no hole for the CPU 12V ATX power cable. Right now I have it going over graphic cards and in order for me to make it look "neater" would need to buy a cable extension. Also, front headphone jack is not shielded properly. Trying to listen to music through it, you get constant background noise, pops. This wasn't fixed from prior 900 and should have been! So front jacks are useless for headphones. I have my hard drives in lower bay and not running raid so my middle bays are clean so for me not a problem with oversized graphic cards but could be if you need to mount a bunch of hard drives and are using some large cards.
Overall average case with good cooling. If price drops to $100 then I'd say it would be a good buy.
Gawd what is it with these bottom mount PSU cases! It's such a flawed design!!!! Cable management is trash (or use ugly extenders), it's a fact that bottom mount PSU cases are less efficient. Geesh wtf will these manufacturers GET IT?! People want CLEAN interiors, not a rats nest of wires and stupid cable sleeves. That and look at the price of this recycled, cheap aluminum box?! People stop paying so much for this junk... Geesh.
This review is a bit limited. There are too few comparisions. Sure, in a few months there will be. I would like to see how rackmount and compartmentalized cases compete against these.
This might have made sense on the full size 1200 and I suppose still useful for some, but still seems like a waste for the targeted audience. Thanks for the nice photos I don't always get that here and is appreciated.
Many people mount their HDDs backwards in Antec 900 cases. It certainly looks cleaner and it solves the problem with clearance behind the graphics cards. My older 900 required me to Dremel some holes under the motherboard to route the wires but Antec caught on quickly and pre-drilled them in later 900 cases. I'm sure that they didn't forget when making the Nine-Hundred Two.
It's nice to see that you guys try to test cases with high end parts but I wish you would use some bigger CPU coolers too.I'm farely sure a TRUE on a DFI LP UT X58 or EVGA x58 wouldn't fit because there isn't enough space above the mobo.
That does seem like an omission. If you are going to go with 3 freaking GPU's in tri-SLI I would assume you would have a Tuniq Extreme or something on there that is massive.
Mr. Katzer, please at least test this in the future to make sure large cpu coolers will fit. I understand you want to keep the setup the same for comparison purposes to previous reviews, but just pop a larger cooler on to make sure clearance issues don't cause problems.
I am currently building a second system (i7) and Noctua sent us two different coolers that we can test different setups. First ones tested with two systems are the Thermaltake ElementS and Antec NSK4480II.
Glad to see they added a side filter to this. I built a system for by brother in law in a Three Hundred and we ended up having to tape cheesecloth to the inside of the side panel behind the side vent to filter dust. Has the standard fans at the top/rear, and a 120mm blowing in through the hard drive cage, all fans at slow.
My brother has this case. It's hideous. I about laughed when I saw it. I just bought this super small shuttle case that is very cool and quiet and fits anywhere. He gets this monster and it's HUGE. I mean really HUGE and loud. Totally out of place in his living room. At first I seriously thought he had like this big ugly guitar amp sitting next to his desk. I was like "what the hell did you get this for?? This isn't 2001 anymore! We don't have super hot CPU's, they run super cool and can fit in any tight case with minimal fans now!". I made him turn all the fans down though so at least it was quiet. Which the temp never budged because it was overkill anyway. With all the fans down and really not needed it tells you that it's all pointless anyway.
Any case recommendations for long gfx card (GTX or Radeon X2) from Antec or other manufacturers which sport the same minimalist/conservative design? I really like my Antec Solo case, but it doesn't fit the new high-end gfx cards from nVidia & ATI...
I'd love to see a revamped Lanboy.. It wouldn't have to be called that just based around some of it's design. All aluminum, (black would be nice) Top mounted PSU, Side drive cages (i was a fan of those) Front and back 120mm fans (hell make them bigger if they want It would be a fatter case tho) Just make sure they have a mesh for cleaning. Perhaps a removable MB tray (wishful thinking) Normal full view window. All in all I think that thing would sell like hotcakes.
I did a build based on the original Antec 900 case; worst choice of case I've made in years! I wanted to build a good gaming rig that would also be quiet - not! Config is: Intel E8500, 4Gb Ram, 2 DVD's 2 HDD's, single ATI 4780 512 Mb video. I had to relegate the thing to use as a "guest" machine. Sounds like a bloody 727 on takeoff.
Then just do what I do. I have an older TitanS case which uses 2 120mm fans but is still not that quiet. I keep it under my desk and have the floor underneath with carpet, some foam on the underside of the desk that you can't see unless you are under there, and foam behind the LCD monitor and attached to the wall behind the case. Nothing obstructs airflow or traps heat, it just significantly helps at absorbing sound that would otherwise reflect up to the user and be unbearable.
I've built a few computers using the old 900 and they're not loud; the fans that is. You should determine what this "loud" is coming from other than just putting everything in and saying the case is loud. It's one of the quieter cases out there but still doesn't compare to 180's.
fwiw, mine's not bad at all (quieter than vaio laptop when idle).
5200+ (89w), 4gb, 2dvds, 2hdds, 3850.
Every fan's on low (two front, top, rear, 2x psu 80mms), hsf's at 1000rpm, and it's perfectly fine. Only the HSF gets pretty loud when it ramps up, but idle temps are 24C so it's all good. I figure if I remove a front fan and either the top or rear it's gonne be quiet enough for most people.
About the GC space and cages sticking out the front; this is actually doable without too much hastle.
Just shunt *all* the front devices forward a little; it shouldn't look abnormal at all as the sides, front and bottom overlap quite a lot (at least on the original 900). If that doesn't give you room, you can just remove the three front bezels from the front fan adaptor and move it even further forward. You loose the uniform look, but if you screw on a fan filter (black, or in my case chrome) to the front of the fan holder it covers the fan up and gives an almost normal looking front. You'll also wanna fill in the gaps in the side of the fan holder (left after removing the bezels), just some black electrical tape over some card cut to the right side works for me. This has given me enough space to fit an ide cable in behind a GC / power connector (angled towards the front of the case).
ohhhh, antec antec antec! what have you done! ok, ignore the above, 900 two only has single circular holes, so looks like you can only mount any screws at the front in limited positions. the original has regular long sliding holes so you can screw front drives / bezels in at any position. i spose you could always drill some more...
This case is not as good as you say it is. The temperatures are the lowest during the first week of usage. After a week the case is filled with dust and fibers and it creates a risk of overheating of components especially hard drives.
I think it's quite stupid that Antec do not put filters behind the front plates. If anyone enjoys opening the case and disassembling the PC just to clear out the tons of dust, than this case is just for you
900 two has front filters behind the front fans (and side); only the original 900 lacked them. Although they're easy to add even on the original (see my post below).
Why has nobody managed to improve upon the original gamer case, the Antec Dragon, aka Chieftec Dragon, aka Antec SX1040, etc? I bought mine like 8 years ago and I still haven't gotten a new case, because I look at the other cases and think "my Dragon has more room than this, and is better constructed!" I'm not an xxxtreme overclocker, so I really don't care about cooling that much. The 2 rear 80m fans in my Dragon work just fine.
Things I love about my Dragon: A) Tons of room; B) Easy to customize front bezel LED's; C) removable HDD trays and nicely designed optical drive sleds; D) a huge window; E) nice color choices (I have mine in blue and it still looks better than 90% of cases out there); F) Sturdy as hell (I sit on it all the time); G) nice sturdy latch and nicely-opening side door (no stupid little slots that you have to line up). It still blows my mind that nobody offers a case with all these things, and more. It is big enough to fit all of the HDD's and a long video card, but I have do have to take out the video card to remove the HDD trays. In that respect, something with sideways-inserted HDD's would be better. I also with it had workable front USB, FW, and audio. (I know some later Dragons had these features, mine does not.) Other than those things, there is not much to improve on this design which has been around since roughly 2000. If Antec still sold the exact same case, I would buy it again now, no doubt.
The same reason I'm sticking to my aging, slightly moded CM Stacker 810. With two overclocked 285s, overclocked i7 and 12 hard drives it's cool and nearly silent and still there is room to add more stuff. Except for looks I don't see any better cases out there now in the <$200 range. Heck, even among the expensive ones there isn't anything appealing. I like that behemoth ABS Canyon case but some strange design decisions were made and IMHO it has a few deal-breaking problems, in particular considering the price. The Raven is a nice attempt at innovation, but fails in many areas. We're still using cases that pretty much have the same layout and features as they had 10 years ago.
Awesome photography! Its hard to get good pictures of all black objects but you guys did a great job and I finally get to see what the case really looks like.
Circular swirling of hot air stuck inside the case? Doesn't make a lot of sense with the huge 200mm exhaust fan at the top but I guess anything is possible when you cram 3 large graphics cards and multiple HD/opticals in there. I did a double take when I saw the open case shot with everything installed. It looked like a mini-ATX!!!
Any chance we'll see a review of the Cooler Master HAF932 on this site? It seems to offer the best possible cooling at the moment, if you can get past the military data center look. Just curious as to how it would compare with the rest of your current lineup from a temp/acoustic perspective.
I'm actually running an older CM Stacker with lots of fans and no filters and due to large positive pressure very little dust accumulates inside. It can be done. Z.
Unless you have a filter on the intake fan(s), there is no way you are not accumulating dust inside unless that is a jet engine on the intake side that prevents any dust from settling. I'll agree if you have adequate positive pressure on a FILTERED intake you will see very little dust in the system. But if you are telling me you have zero filtration, I just don't see it being possible unless you're in a cleanroom.
I guess they surmised that if you put enough plastic windows and blinking lights on it, you'd be able to sell a bowl of tapeworms to you average WoWTard.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder I suppose. I think it's pretty cool looking. Apparently the "in" thing right now for cases is military stealth-type design with angular references. Kinda like something you'd see in a futuristic Sci-Fi flick.
LOL, good one. I do think it's pretty "cool" looking, but beauty really is in the eye of the beholder..in this case...the beholder's an old blind guy. It's cool in the sense its very high tech and retro looking, but ugly in terms of elegance. As far as functionality goes, I think it's a great case with lots of awesome features for the advanced computer guru. I would actually consider buying it! http://findaerialequipment.com/">aerial lifts ftw
LOL. Point taken. Well, there's always the P180 or P182 from Antec for the more conservative PC building aficionados among us. IMO, Alienware/Dell has some more hideous/gaudy looking cases than this - and they are selling reasonably well.
Cool review, but would have been nice to see it pit against its predecessor. I'd have to say I'm not a big fan of the top of the case, I actually use the tray at the top.
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56 Comments
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poee - Saturday, April 4, 2009 - link
It baffles me why anyone would think it acceptable to market a PC case as a "gaming case" in 2009 and STILL not make allowances for 10.5" graphics cards!How long has it been since the release of the GeForce 8800 GTX? Nearly 2 1/2 years? How in the world can a company think that a "gaming case" doesn't need to comfortably fit a 10.5" card??? And, you know, there are already some 11" cards out now. It doesn't take a crystal ball to see that high-end graphics cards will likely only get longer, not shorter, as time goes on. As it is, ATI and NVIDIA could use even more space for their cards for better cooling, power management, etc., but they must keep the length down as much as possible because most of the cases out there cannot handle longer cards. So why are NEW gaming cases being manufactured that are still not made for these longer cards?
Everyone who wants a high-end GPU doesn't necessarily want or need a full tower case. It's silly to have to get a case that has massive unused vertical space just so you can make use of its horizontal space. How difficult could it be to design a mid-tower case that adds an additional 3" or so front-to-back over the standard (obsolete) dimensions? Or does everyone really believe that the days of long graphics cards are a passing fad?
gnesterenko - Saturday, March 28, 2009 - link
Repeatedly I see these case reviews that continue to ignore the NZXT Tempest. 3x120mm in, 1x120mm out back, 2x140mm up top. This thing moves a LOT of air and is very quiet. I'd like to see it comapred against some other cases for a change...Kenjis - Sunday, March 8, 2009 - link
I use an Antec 900 original, the Mk2 looks great, maybe not worth the hassle of undoing all my cable management and everything to swap to a new case but I do have some complaints about the testingI think your average person who will be building a Tri-SLI rig with 9 hard drives is going to be looking for a much larger case than this personally, I just dont see them picking this one
Now then, I have 4 HDDs and a 8800GTS 512 in there, Yes, its a bit tight, but I've found a lot of cases to be just as bad that are going to fit where I want my case to be
Air filters? My case stays pretty damn clean because its up off the floor....
The Stacker was too tall for my desk, i couldnt reach the power button or anything else, and i hate having my case on the floor for dust reasons, I chose the 900 and loved it so much i bought 2 :)
I'm happy with it, and its quiet as well
Grimm920 - Saturday, February 21, 2009 - link
You tested the 900 2 and you didn't even bother to cable manage the case!!What a rookie mistake... come on Anandtech, you can do better then that.
I've built a couple of computer already with this case and it has great cable management capabilities... I'm so disappointed in this review
thebeastie - Saturday, March 7, 2009 - link
I think case reviews on a lot of review web sites in general need better lab conditions.They have the nerve to often start reviews talking about how cases and PSU choice is often over looked by consumers but when you try to look at the reviews they don't put much effort in them selves!
I would like to see *all* case reviews performed in a professional hosting state of the art environment, I have been to a lot of data centers and gone through their tours, they always talk about how the temperature is always with in 1 degree and the humidity is at a exact percent.
If the humidity is changing for every case review even if the room temperature is the same it is still going to make a huge difference in the thermal performance tests.
Googer - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
No case revuiew should ever be considered complete without having installed and photographed oversized PSU like PC Power and Coolings 1KW-SR or similar. How well would one fit in this chasis?Googer - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
No case revuiew should ever be considered complete without having installed and photographed oversized PSU like PC Power and Coolings 1KW-SR or similar. How well would one fit in this chasis?mazzmond - Monday, February 16, 2009 - link
I just put together an i7 build using this case and I'd rate it as about average to good for price paid. If it comes down to $100 then it would be a good case for money assuming you like how it looks.Pros include excellent cooling, fairly quiet for amount of fans, excellent airflow, ease of putting the system together and at least the case I got didn't have any build quality issues or cosmetic problems. Everything works. The review didn't mention it but it does have a cable management system with several holes cut out and plenty of room for a lot of cables on the side (had no problems putting the side panel down) and they do include some cable ties on the other side of the case for this as well. Dust filters are now included which is nice and I think it looks fine.
Cons include no hole for the CPU 12V ATX power cable. Right now I have it going over graphic cards and in order for me to make it look "neater" would need to buy a cable extension. Also, front headphone jack is not shielded properly. Trying to listen to music through it, you get constant background noise, pops. This wasn't fixed from prior 900 and should have been! So front jacks are useless for headphones. I have my hard drives in lower bay and not running raid so my middle bays are clean so for me not a problem with oversized graphic cards but could be if you need to mount a bunch of hard drives and are using some large cards.
Overall average case with good cooling. If price drops to $100 then I'd say it would be a good buy.
v12v12 - Monday, February 16, 2009 - link
Gawd what is it with these bottom mount PSU cases! It's such a flawed design!!!! Cable management is trash (or use ugly extenders), it's a fact that bottom mount PSU cases are less efficient. Geesh wtf will these manufacturers GET IT?! People want CLEAN interiors, not a rats nest of wires and stupid cable sleeves. That and look at the price of this recycled, cheap aluminum box?! People stop paying so much for this junk... Geesh.Another over-hyped box of boring...
Itguy32 - Sunday, February 15, 2009 - link
This review is a bit limited. There are too few comparisions. Sure, in a few months there will be. I would like to see how rackmount and compartmentalized cases compete against these.JeBarr - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link
This might have made sense on the full size 1200 and I suppose still useful for some, but still seems like a waste for the targeted audience. Thanks for the nice photos I don't always get that here and is appreciated.CZroe - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link
Many people mount their HDDs backwards in Antec 900 cases. It certainly looks cleaner and it solves the problem with clearance behind the graphics cards. My older 900 required me to Dremel some holes under the motherboard to route the wires but Antec caught on quickly and pre-drilled them in later 900 cases. I'm sure that they didn't forget when making the Nine-Hundred Two.jjj - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link
It's nice to see that you guys try to test cases with high end parts but I wish you would use some bigger CPU coolers too.I'm farely sure a TRUE on a DFI LP UT X58 or EVGA x58 wouldn't fit because there isn't enough space above the mobo.7Enigma - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
That does seem like an omission. If you are going to go with 3 freaking GPU's in tri-SLI I would assume you would have a Tuniq Extreme or something on there that is massive.Mr. Katzer, please at least test this in the future to make sure large cpu coolers will fit. I understand you want to keep the setup the same for comparison purposes to previous reviews, but just pop a larger cooler on to make sure clearance issues don't cause problems.
Christoph Katzer - Thursday, February 19, 2009 - link
I am currently building a second system (i7) and Noctua sent us two different coolers that we can test different setups. First ones tested with two systems are the Thermaltake ElementS and Antec NSK4480II.poohbear - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link
u guys say:"The drawback of course is that you can only fit a maximum of nine hard drives"
wow, so, their target audience might need more than 9 hdd?! lol that's hardly a drawback man. jebus.
yacoub - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Using dictatorial software, eh? :)
7Enigma - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
Ha I wondered what that meant, now I just read it phonetically and see how Dragon misconstrued that. :)strikeback03 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Glad to see they added a side filter to this. I built a system for by brother in law in a Three Hundred and we ended up having to tape cheesecloth to the inside of the side panel behind the side vent to filter dust. Has the standard fans at the top/rear, and a 120mm blowing in through the hard drive cage, all fans at slow.ianken - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
...that's a pretty sloppy cabling job there guys.Alos, this might make a nice server box. Nine bays up front, I could fit three four disc traless hotswap cages there.
IvanAndreevich - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6850(Quad-core 3.0GHz, 2x6MB L2, 1333FSB)
It's 2x4MB L2 ;)
v1001 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
My brother has this case. It's hideous. I about laughed when I saw it. I just bought this super small shuttle case that is very cool and quiet and fits anywhere. He gets this monster and it's HUGE. I mean really HUGE and loud. Totally out of place in his living room. At first I seriously thought he had like this big ugly guitar amp sitting next to his desk. I was like "what the hell did you get this for?? This isn't 2001 anymore! We don't have super hot CPU's, they run super cool and can fit in any tight case with minimal fans now!". I made him turn all the fans down though so at least it was quiet. Which the temp never budged because it was overkill anyway. With all the fans down and really not needed it tells you that it's all pointless anyway.bruf - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Any case recommendations for long gfx card (GTX or Radeon X2) from Antec or other manufacturers which sport the same minimalist/conservative design? I really like my Antec Solo case, but it doesn't fit the new high-end gfx cards from nVidia & ATI...Thx,
Christoph Katzer - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
If you don't have too many drives take this one ;)just4U - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
I'd love to see a revamped Lanboy.. It wouldn't have to be called that just based around some of it's design. All aluminum, (black would be nice) Top mounted PSU, Side drive cages (i was a fan of those) Front and back 120mm fans (hell make them bigger if they want It would be a fatter case tho) Just make sure they have a mesh for cleaning. Perhaps a removable MB tray (wishful thinking) Normal full view window. All in all I think that thing would sell like hotcakes.greywood - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
I did a build based on the original Antec 900 case; worst choice of case I've made in years! I wanted to build a good gaming rig that would also be quiet - not! Config is: Intel E8500, 4Gb Ram, 2 DVD's 2 HDD's, single ATI 4780 512 Mb video. I had to relegate the thing to use as a "guest" machine. Sounds like a bloody 727 on takeoff.7Enigma - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
Then just do what I do. I have an older TitanS case which uses 2 120mm fans but is still not that quiet. I keep it under my desk and have the floor underneath with carpet, some foam on the underside of the desk that you can't see unless you are under there, and foam behind the LCD monitor and attached to the wall behind the case. Nothing obstructs airflow or traps heat, it just significantly helps at absorbing sound that would otherwise reflect up to the user and be unbearable.The0ne - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
I've built a few computers using the old 900 and they're not loud; the fans that is. You should determine what this "loud" is coming from other than just putting everything in and saying the case is loud. It's one of the quieter cases out there but still doesn't compare to 180's.pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
fwiw, mine's not bad at all (quieter than vaio laptop when idle).5200+ (89w), 4gb, 2dvds, 2hdds, 3850.
Every fan's on low (two front, top, rear, 2x psu 80mms), hsf's at 1000rpm, and it's perfectly fine. Only the HSF gets pretty loud when it ramps up, but idle temps are 24C so it's all good. I figure if I remove a front fan and either the top or rear it's gonne be quiet enough for most people.
pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
About the GC space and cages sticking out the front; this is actually doable without too much hastle.Just shunt *all* the front devices forward a little; it shouldn't look abnormal at all as the sides, front and bottom overlap quite a lot (at least on the original 900). If that doesn't give you room, you can just remove the three front bezels from the front fan adaptor and move it even further forward. You loose the uniform look, but if you screw on a fan filter (black, or in my case chrome) to the front of the fan holder it covers the fan up and gives an almost normal looking front. You'll also wanna fill in the gaps in the side of the fan holder (left after removing the bezels), just some black electrical tape over some card cut to the right side works for me. This has given me enough space to fit an ide cable in behind a GC / power connector (angled towards the front of the case).
pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
forgot to say, this also allows you to clean the filters much more easily (ala p180). another bonus for me :)pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
ohhhh, antec antec antec! what have you done! ok, ignore the above, 900 two only has single circular holes, so looks like you can only mount any screws at the front in limited positions. the original has regular long sliding holes so you can screw front drives / bezels in at any position. i spose you could always drill some more...AstroGuardian - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
This case is not as good as you say it is. The temperatures are the lowest during the first week of usage. After a week the case is filled with dust and fibers and it creates a risk of overheating of components especially hard drives.I think it's quite stupid that Antec do not put filters behind the front plates. If anyone enjoys opening the case and disassembling the PC just to clear out the tons of dust, than this case is just for you
pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
900 two has front filters behind the front fans (and side); only the original 900 lacked them. Although they're easy to add even on the original (see my post below).slashbinslashbash - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Why has nobody managed to improve upon the original gamer case, the Antec Dragon, aka Chieftec Dragon, aka Antec SX1040, etc? I bought mine like 8 years ago and I still haven't gotten a new case, because I look at the other cases and think "my Dragon has more room than this, and is better constructed!" I'm not an xxxtreme overclocker, so I really don't care about cooling that much. The 2 rear 80m fans in my Dragon work just fine.Things I love about my Dragon: A) Tons of room; B) Easy to customize front bezel LED's; C) removable HDD trays and nicely designed optical drive sleds; D) a huge window; E) nice color choices (I have mine in blue and it still looks better than 90% of cases out there); F) Sturdy as hell (I sit on it all the time); G) nice sturdy latch and nicely-opening side door (no stupid little slots that you have to line up). It still blows my mind that nobody offers a case with all these things, and more. It is big enough to fit all of the HDD's and a long video card, but I have do have to take out the video card to remove the HDD trays. In that respect, something with sideways-inserted HDD's would be better. I also with it had workable front USB, FW, and audio. (I know some later Dragons had these features, mine does not.) Other than those things, there is not much to improve on this design which has been around since roughly 2000. If Antec still sold the exact same case, I would buy it again now, no doubt.
JeBarr - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link
Yep, the egg still sells chieftec dragon for 100 bucks and worth every penny IMO.Zak - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
The same reason I'm sticking to my aging, slightly moded CM Stacker 810. With two overclocked 285s, overclocked i7 and 12 hard drives it's cool and nearly silent and still there is room to add more stuff. Except for looks I don't see any better cases out there now in the <$200 range. Heck, even among the expensive ones there isn't anything appealing. I like that behemoth ABS Canyon case but some strange design decisions were made and IMHO it has a few deal-breaking problems, in particular considering the price. The Raven is a nice attempt at innovation, but fails in many areas. We're still using cases that pretty much have the same layout and features as they had 10 years ago.Z.
direfox - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Awesome photography! Its hard to get good pictures of all black objects but you guys did a great job and I finally get to see what the case really looks like.cactusdog - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Do it got Emails?Its ok but not my style.
hob196 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
How come the Idle System temperatures get higher when the fan's running faster? Is this a chart snafu?7Enigma - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
Circular swirling of hot air stuck inside the case? Doesn't make a lot of sense with the huge 200mm exhaust fan at the top but I guess anything is possible when you cram 3 large graphics cards and multiple HD/opticals in there. I did a double take when I saw the open case shot with everything installed. It looked like a mini-ATX!!!Christoph Katzer - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Nope,volgagerman - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Any chance we'll see a review of the Cooler Master HAF932 on this site? It seems to offer the best possible cooling at the moment, if you can get past the military data center look. Just curious as to how it would compare with the rest of your current lineup from a temp/acoustic perspective.sonci - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Not surprised that is a good cooling case, tons of fans without dust filters, certainly not for my living room..Zak - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
I'm actually running an older CM Stacker with lots of fans and no filters and due to large positive pressure very little dust accumulates inside. It can be done. Z.7Enigma - Tuesday, February 17, 2009 - link
Does....Not....Compute....Unless you have a filter on the intake fan(s), there is no way you are not accumulating dust inside unless that is a jet engine on the intake side that prevents any dust from settling. I'll agree if you have adequate positive pressure on a FILTERED intake you will see very little dust in the system. But if you are telling me you have zero filtration, I just don't see it being possible unless you're in a cleanroom.
fri2219 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Kind of defeats the purpose of the fans.I guess they surmised that if you put enough plastic windows and blinking lights on it, you'd be able to sell a bowl of tapeworms to you average WoWTard.
Bonesdad - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
I think it's pretty hideous...MamiyaOtaru - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Looks better than the original 900 IMHO. That slanted front was hideous. I don't mind this one at all, though I wish the pastic accents would go.Nfarce - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder I suppose. I think it's pretty cool looking. Apparently the "in" thing right now for cases is military stealth-type design with angular references. Kinda like something you'd see in a futuristic Sci-Fi flick.Bonesdad - Monday, February 16, 2009 - link
Exactly my point...I live in a house...not the Battlestar Crapactica.Frakkin case designers...are they all 12 years old?
Mikey - Wednesday, March 4, 2009 - link
LOL, good one. I do think it's pretty "cool" looking, but beauty really is in the eye of the beholder..in this case...the beholder's an old blind guy. It's cool in the sense its very high tech and retro looking, but ugly in terms of elegance. As far as functionality goes, I think it's a great case with lots of awesome features for the advanced computer guru. I would actually consider buying it! http://findaerialequipment.com/">aerial lifts ftwNfarce - Monday, February 16, 2009 - link
LOL. Point taken. Well, there's always the P180 or P182 from Antec for the more conservative PC building aficionados among us. IMO, Alienware/Dell has some more hideous/gaudy looking cases than this - and they are selling reasonably well.http://www.alienware.com/products/desktop-computer...">http://www.alienware.com/products/desktop-computer...
FATCamaro - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Agreed... puke!!cparka23 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
FYI, the graph has noise measured in degrees Celsius.wicko - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link
Cool review, but would have been nice to see it pit against its predecessor. I'd have to say I'm not a big fan of the top of the case, I actually use the tray at the top.