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Home » Case
Thermaltake V9 Case Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: October 1, 2008
Page: 1 of 6
$ Check REAL-TIME pricing for Thermaltake V9 Black Edition Blk Mid-Tower Case VJ400G1N2Z - ATX mATX $.
TigerDirect: $89.99 Directron: $84.99
CircuitCity: $89.99 Newegg: $99.99

Introduction
Hardware Secrets Golden Award

Thermaltake V9 is steel mid-tower case targeted to gamers and usually when the manufacturer says that a case is targeted to gamers this means a good cooling system: this case has one 230-mm fan on the top panel, one 120-mm fan on the rear and one 120-mm fan on the front, plus the mesh used on the side panels use very big holes. V9 has also four 5 ¼” bays, two external 3 ½” bays and five internal 3 ½” bays, with the 5 ¼” bays and the internal 3 ½” ones featuring a screwless fastening mechanism. Let’s take a complete look on this new release from Thermaltake.

Thermaltake V9
click to enlarge
Figure 1: Thermaltake V9 case.

Thermaltake V9
click to enlarge
Figure 2: Thermaltake V9 case.

On Figure 3 you can see the front panel from V9.This case does not have a door. The covers that protect each bay are meshed and featuring dust filters. In theory meshed covers improves the airflow inside the PC, however on V9 each bay (except the top one) comes with the traditional metallic cover between the front plastic cover and the bay itself, so unless you break these metallic covers you won’t be allowing the case to have the maximum internal airflow it could achieve. More about this later when we show this case disassembled. As mentioned before, this case has four external 5 ¼” bays and two external 3 ½” bays for floppy disk drives or memory card readers. If you don’t have floppy disk drives or memory card readers, you can use these bays for installing more hard disk drives (more on this later).

Thermaltake V9
click to enlarge
Figure 3: Front panel.

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