Rosewill Stealth Mid-Tower Chassis Review
Peter Donnell / 8 years ago
Complete System
Building a system inside the Stealth took a little over half an hour, which is a little longer than I would have expected, but it doesn’t come with the motherboard stand-offs pre-installed, and that does tend to slow down the first build quite a bit. Timing aside, I’m really happy with the overall build, and while not the most spacious chassis ever, it managed to eat up our Sapphire R9 270X Tri-X Toxic, despite it being a rather large GPU design with relative ease.
There’s not much room left to play with here, so additional 120mm fans on the interior aren’t an option, but should be OK with most other GPU designs on the market, as this one really is quite large.
There’s a good amount of space left here for a bottom mounted cooler, but could also be easily used for excess cables, or for use of a larger PSU should your system require one.
The cable routing hole for the motherboard 4+4 pin was quite limited, and took a lot of fiddling around, I would highly recommend routing this cable before you install the motherboard to save some trouble, not a deal breaker, but worth mentioning.
The cable routing grommets are good quality, with a durable feel to them and they’re well placed to ensure you don’t have excess cable trail throughout your build.
Of course, the hard drive trays just do their job without any major concerns, just clip in your drives and you’re good to go.
Overall, this is such a nice build for what I first set out with the mindset that it was a cheaper chassis. There’s a lot of little details here that helped us achieve a great looking build and it’s nice to have that side panel window to show it all off; let’s just pretend I hadn’t forgotten to clip that front panel shut properly shall we?
First up the power, we can see the lovely interior lighting of our GPU and motherboard through the window, as well as those gorgeous red LED fans that come pre-installed on the front panel.