Hardware Secrets
Home | Camera | Case | CE | Cooling | CPU | Input | Memory | Mobile | Motherboard | Networking | Power | Storage | Video | Other
Content
Articles
First Look
Gabriel's Blog
News
Reviews
Tutorials
Main Menu
About Us
Awarded Products
Compare Prices
Datasheets
Dictionary
Download
Drivers
Forums
Links
Manufacturer Finder
Newsletter
On The Web
RSS Feed
Test Your Skills
Twitter
Newsletter
Subscribe today!
Search




Recommended
Maximum PC Guide to Extreme PC Mods
Maximum PC Guide to Extreme PC Mods, by Jon Phillips (Que), starting at $29.99
Home » Case
Thermaltake Armor+ ESA Case Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: April 30, 2008
Page: 2 of 9
$ Check REAL-TIME pricing for Thermaltake inc. VH600LBWS $.
TheNerds: $354.99 Buy.com: $349.99
Beach Audio: $385.99 CompUSA: $374.99

Introduction (Cont’d)

On Figures 5 and 6 you can see the top panel from this case, which has two meshes. The one located at the rear part is used to help to dissipate the heat from the power supply. Since on this case the power supply is installed on the top portion of the case, there is no space for the installation of a fan between this mesh and the power supply. But you can install a 120-mm fan below the other mesh, which is located at the middle of the top panel.

On the front part of the top panel there is a sliding door. Below this door you can find a small storage compartment. If you decide to install a liquid cooling solution that is installed on 5 ¼” bays like Bigwater 780e, you will need to remove this compartment in order to have access to the water tank. In this case you will also need to move the ESA control circuit that comes installed on the upper-most 5 ¼” bay to a lower bay, since the water cooler will need to be installed on the upper-most bays.

This sliding door, however, has a lousy quality, at least on the sample we got. It would get out of place whenever we tried to fully open it and we would waste a lot of time trying to put it back in its rail. This is another point we hope Thermaltake fixes before releasing this product.

Thermaltake Armor+ ESA Case
click to enlarge
Figure 5: Top panel.

Thermaltake Armor+ ESA Case
click to enlarge
Figure 6: Storage compartment, buttons and connectors found on the top panel.

On the top panel you can find the power and reset switches, one Firewire port, four USB ports, one eSATA port and microphone input and headphones output. The amount of connectors available on this case is just perfect.

On the bottom panel, shown on Figure 7, we have the air intake for the two optional 120- or 140-mm fans or the two bottom hard disk drives (more about this later). Here you will find the thumbscrews used to hold the bottom hard disk drive modules.

Thermaltake Armor+ ESA Case
click to enlarge
Figure 7: Bottom panel.

Finally we have the rear panel on Figure 8. As we have already explained, this case has ten slots for expansion cards and not only seven like regular cases, including full tower models. Because of this feature this case is categorized as a “super tower” case. Ten slots allow you to install extended ATX motherboards and also up to four video cards. If you have a motherboard that accepts four video cards and you have four double-slot video cards then you need a case with at least eight slots. The funny thing is that so far the only platform accepting four video cards is CrossFireX from AMD/ATI and this case is targeted to nVidia-based motherboards, since it supports ESA monitoring technology.

On the rear panel you can also see a 120-mm fan –you can control its speed thru ESA software, if you use an nVidia-based motherboard – and two holes on the top left side that can be opened if you use an external water cooling system or a water cooling system that uses an external radiator.

On this panel you can also see a handle on the left side. This handle is used to remove the motherboard tray, as we will explain later.

This case uses thumbscrews to hold the side panels to its body and the left side panel (the one you need to open to build your PC) can be locked with a key that comes with the product (see the key on the right side from Figure 8).

Thermaltake Armor+ ESA Case
click to enlarge
Figure 8: Rear panel.

Pages (9): « 1 [2] 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 »
Print Version | Send to Friend | | Bookmark Article | Comments (0)

Related Content
  • Thermaltake Bigwater 760i
  • Gigabyte Mercury Pro Case
  • ESA Technology Explained
  • Thermaltake BigWater 780e Water Cooler
  • ECS GeForce 9800 GTX+ Hydra Video Card Review

  • Recommended Deal.
    FAN-CASE Exhaust Case 210mm Cooling CardStarTech FANCASE PCI Slot Case Cooler - Retail


    Newegg: $7.19 Amazon: $9.95
    eCost: $5.99 Geeks.com: $12.99

    RSSLatest News
    IN WIN LAN Party in Southern California
    November 20, 2009 - 12:37 PM PST
    Patriot Announces PS-100 SSD Series
    November 19, 2009 - 7:30 AM PST
    Antec Launches TPQ-1200 PSU
    November 18, 2009 - 11:30 AM PST
    AMD/ATI Launches Radeon HD 5970
    November 18, 2009 - 10:18 AM PST
    OCZ Launches Colossus SSD Series
    November 17, 2009 - 1:39 PM PST
    NZXT Unleashes Tempest EVO Mid-Tower Case
    November 17, 2009 - 1:06 PM PST
    nVidia Launches GeForce GT 240
    November 17, 2009 - 10:18 AM PST
    Arctic Cooling Announces Accelero TWIN TURBO PRO VGA Cooler
    November 16, 2009 - 11:46 AM PST
    PowerColor Announces PLAY! HD5770 Video Card
    November 13, 2009 - 12:51 PM PST
    G.Skill Announces Falcon II SSD Series
    November 11, 2009 - 3:31 PM PST
    .:: More News ::.

    RSSLatest Content
    Ultra X4 500 W Power Supply Review
    Seagate Barracuda XT 2 TB Hard Disk Drive Review
    Nintendo Wii Fit Plus Review
    AMD ATI Chips Comparison Table
    nVidia Chips Comparison Table
    Gigabyte G41M-ES2L Motherboard
    Netflix on Playstation 3 Review
    CM Storm Sentinel Advance Mouse Review
    Titan Skalli CPU Cooler Review
    Nexus RX-6300 630 W Power Supply Review
    Gigabyte P55-UD6 Motherboard
    Nintendo Wii Review
    SilverStone Grandia GD04 Case Review
    Can We Trust the 80 Plus Certification?
    NZXT Gamma Case Review

    Our Most Popular Articles
    Maximum CPU Temperature
    1,078,362 views
    How to Find Out Your Motherboard Manufacturer and Model
    706,322 views
    nVidia Chips Comparison Table
    679,182 views
    Connecting Two PCs Using a USB-USB Cable
    593,498 views
    How To Correctly Apply Thermal Grease
    562,504 views
    AMD ATI Chips Comparison Table
    560,163 views
    ATI Radeon X1300 Pro Review
    487,951 views
    ATI Radeon X1600 XT Review
    477,117 views
    How To Perform a BIOS Upgrade
    394,548 views
    Sempron vs. Athlon XP
    338,530 views

    Latest Threads in Our Forums
    Dell Inspiron 6000 Powers but will not boot...
    by Merman
    Ultra X4 500 W Power Supply Review
    by Merman
    IN WIN LAN Party in Southern California
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    Getting A Hard Copy
    by Trevorrross
    Am I Making The Right Choice?
    by need2know
    Is it available to mount the Zalman cooler?
    by Olle P
    dsl modem prob
    by Sherry
    Seagate Barracuda XT 2 TB Hard Disk Drive Review
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    Overclocking a dell xps 410
    by 6dracing
    How to recover mp3's, pdf & chm files, applications from formated harddrive partition
    by tomahawk 1705
    .:: Visit Our Forums ::.


    © 2004-9, Hardware Secrets, LLC. All rights reserved.
    Advertising | Legal Information | Privacy Policy
    All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST, GMT -08:00)