Thermaltake XaserV Damier V6000A
by Purav Sanghani on July 22, 2004 3:21 PM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
Expansion
The V6000A isn't the best case for expansion purposes. It has a limited number of HDD bays unlike many other cases on the market in the Damier's price range. There are only five 3-1/2" drive bays of which only three are meant to be used for HDD installations. The other two can also be used for HDDs, but will not receive any air cooling from the front intake fan.The V6000A, however, does have the standard four 5-1/2" drive bays, five if we count the bay occupied by the rheobus. Also, we haven't mentioned enough how well Thermaltake has implemented a tool-less design in the Damier series.
The mountings for the add-on cards use tool-less clips that slide in and out and lock into place to secure add-on cards in their slots. The clips do sometimes get stuck while sliding them out and require some effort to displace.
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Operandi - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
I agree with the above comments, it's becoming pretty clear that this isn't the type of case your target audience is looking for.skiboysteve - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
"Our results show that the CPU was kept at a stable operating temperature, at 56.2 degrees, which is about 40 degrees Celsius below the Athlon 64 3200's maximum recommended operating temperature.""System On-Time CPU
30 43.6"
What??
skiboysteve - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
i have the 3000a and I love it to death, although i have to agree, there are way too many wires. I did a great job hiding them though so the window looks good.Pollock - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
No, #1, check some of the previous case reviews here; there ARE uglier things. Several of them.TrogdorJW - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
I have to agree. Sure, it's big and roomy. It also scream, "I LOVE THERMALTAKE!" Personally, I would rather make a different kind of statement with my case.You know what someone needs to do? Create a case with pre-installed fans and wires, with a separate power unit (a very small one should suffice) to provide all of the fans and other devices with power. They could build the system with all the fans installed and still keep the majority of wires hidden away. And they should use 120mm fans spinning at lower RPMs. *That* would be something to spend $160 on!
Spend $160 on this monstrosity? Ugh. If you need big, there are better options. If you want silent, there are MUCH better options. If you want bright lights and gawdy flash, however, this case fits the bill. I'm sure there are a bunch of teenagers out there that think this case looks totally l33t. They're welcome to it, I suppose.
JKing76 - Thursday, July 22, 2004 - link
That is truely the ugliest thing I have ever seen.