“The Panzerbox also has room for custom watercooling solutions with dual radiators as well as enough real estate for a couple 10.5″ graphics cards. This case can also handle up to four hard drives, three optical drives, and large third-party air-cooled heatsinks for gamers and other enthusiasts who like need a stylish case with plenty of expandability options.”Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- Thermaltake Element V VL20001W2Z @ motherboards.org
- Lian Li PC- B25FB KingMod Edition @ techPowerUp
- NZXT Beta EVO Black Mid-Tower Case @ Rbmods
- Thermaltake WingRS 301 Mid tower Case Review @ XtremeComputing
- Antec Nine Hundred Two Mid Tower Case Review @ ThinkComputers
- SilverStone SUGO SG04-FH @ motherboards.org
- Cooler Master HAF 922 Full-Tower Case @ TheTechLounge
- Thermaltake Element G Gaming Case Review @ Legit Reviews
- Xigmatek Thor’s Hammer CPU Cooler/Heatsink Review @ Tweaknews
- Cooler Master Hyper N620 CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Noctua NH-D14 CPU Cooler @ PCShopTalk
- Thermaltake SpinQ Heatpipe CPU Cooler @ Futurelooks
- Noctua NH-D14 140mm CPU Cooler @ Tweaktown
- Prolimatech Megahalems Rev B CPU Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
- Gelid Tranquillo CPU cooler @ Guru of 3D
- Thermaltake ISGC-400 CPU Cooler Review @ Tweaknews
A Panzer with removable parts
The newest case off of Steve’s test bench is the NZXT Panzerbox, $100 of quality aluminium casing.
Two 190mm fans offer air cooling but it also has holes for a water cooling setup if that is what you prefer. He does leave you with a warning about the spacing on the PCIe slots, it is better to install the cards after the motherboard is happily installed in the case.