“Like the NZXT Hush did for mid-tower owners, the Whisper looks to do for those who want a bit more room in their case. With seven external 5¼” bays available and a whopping nine internal 3½” drive trays, the Whisper would make for an excellent server case or a high-end workstation with a need for lots of storage capacity. And all the features like solid panels backed with acoustical foam, rubber isolators for the power supply and hard drives and quiet running fans included, you would expect to make this a nearly noise-free enclosure.”Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- SilverStone Sugo SG04 @ Phoronix
- Ikonik Zaria A20 Mid-Tower Enclosure @ Tweaktown
- Thermaltake V9 Gaming Case Review @ ThinkComputers
- Raidmax Aura Case @ Modders-Inc
- NZXT Guardian 921 Case @ TechwareLabs
- Silverstone’s Fortress FT01 chassis @ bit-tech
- HSPC TopDeck Tech Station @ PureOverclock
- NZXT Sentry LX Fan Controller Review @ Virtual-Hideout
- Tuniq TX-2 vs Gelid GC1 Thermal Paste Showdown @ BCCHardware
- Noctua U12P CPU Cooler @ Tech-Reviews
- Thermaltake PW850i ProWater @ BurnOutPC
- Cooler Master V8 Giant CPU Cooler Review @ Tweaknews
- Cooler Master V8 @ Legion Hardware
- AMA Serac 770 Watercooling Review @ DriverHeaven
- Swiftech H20-220 Apex Ultra+ Liquid-Cooling System @ X-bit Labs
- Swiftech MCP655 (adjustable) Pump @ Bjorn3D
The Hush has quietly grown up

NZXT’s Hush is a mid-sized tower with a fair bit of cooling ability and some serious noise reduction features. That made it a good case for those able to fit their systems into a mid-tower, but leaves those looking for the extra space provided by a full tower. Enter the Whisper, a full tower E-ATX version with the same noise reduction features and cooling. OCIA has the same complaint that I personally noticed on the Hush, for a quiet case they’ve included some rather noisy 120mm fans. That is an easy problem to fix, thankfully. Read on for the full scoop.