Fractal Design Node 605 HTPC Chassis Review
The build process for the Node 605 only took a snappy 10 mins, this is thanks to it’s clean layout and surprisingly spacious interior. Even with a large graphics card in the system there is plenty of space and cables are well out of the way, leaving a good amount of airflow within the chassis.
To make way for the large GTX 560 Ti graphics card I did have to remove one of the hard drive bays. This limits us to two hard drives but for today’s build we only installed one and this wasn’t an issue. It’s also uncommon to require such a powerful graphics card in a HTPC unless you also want it to play games using things like Steams big screen mode.
Our low profile CPU cooler has left us with plenty of room above the motherboard, you could install a pair of 80mm extraction fans at the back but with so much room for the air to flow from the front intake fans toward the rear of the chassis you likely won’t need it, unless of course you expect to place the chassis in a warm area or something with more restricted airflow.
Around the back of the chassis, everything is looking neat and tidy, with plenty of room for airflow between our GTX 560 Ti and the PSU, helped a little by the ventilation holes in the expansion slot covers.
So if you can only have a slimline ODD with an ITX build and there’s no 5 1/4 bay, this means the only way to install a BluRay drive is with an ITX board. Don’t get me wrong, I like Fractal Design but I think there’s a serious flaw here. The point of a media centre is that it’s a centre for all media. With no option for an optical drive with larger motherboards you become somwhat limited on it’s use.
How about using it a a media server? Well, no, not really. A limit of 4 drives reduces it’s usefulness, plus you don’t need a full ATX motherboard for a media server, M-ATX or ITX would do just as well.
It’s a good looking case and no doubt it’s quiet and easy to build but I have to question it’s usefulness for it’s target audience.
ATX boards are VERY GOOD for media centers that will be used to receive satellite and terrestrial TV signals and will also be used for gaming and bluray (after all, the goal is to have everything in a single box, that’s the job of the word “center” in “media center”). You’ll see your PCIe and PCI slots rapidly taken once you add a few tuners and a serious audio card. So this case is an awful design IMO. If you plan on using an m-ITX motherboard, you have plenty of options out there that are much better than this case. If you want ordinary ATX, you’re better off with solutions from Antec, for instance.
Really bad design IMO. Good looks, terrible functionality.
I Also wonder how Fractal Design became well known for their slick styling, when the styling of every one I’ve seen seems to be that of a featureless black box.
It’s called minimalism. They’re known for it because it’s a rare quality given the obnoxious aesthetics that typify PC cases.
Hey look! It’s a Lian Li PC-C60 without all the annoying 3.5″ and 5.25″ drive capacity and ATX/GPU/ODD configuration options! Thumbs up!
I believe you can have a micro-ATX motherboard and still be able to fit an optimal drive.
optical drive, thank you for correctly me iPhone…
This is great, except for trying to find a slim blu ray drive, and using said slim blu ray drive. Someone will break that flimsy thing in a home environment. Would have been nice to allow a normal drive that has its door and button integrated with the case, or a slot load as on some other nice cases.
No IR window makes this a no-go. It makes no sense to have this beautiful clean case and then have to plop an external IR receiver on top of it or leave the flip-down door open to install a IR dongle. I also don’t understand the decsion to leave off a 5.25″ drive bay. The Lian-Li PC-C50B comes closer to what I am looking for but it too has no IR window. The search continues…