So, back to take a look at the main chassis component again. With six thumbscrews, you can open up the back panel to dive into the interior. Here you’ll find two more boxes of components, as well as the rear panel dust filter.
The wiring loom for the front I/O is here. However, this space is handy for the radiator/storage bracket too.
Towards the top, you’ll find three HDD bays with removable brackets. This one annoys me, as they cover the bulk of important routing grommets. You can remove them, but what if you need the storage bays? I don’t know, I think TT could have moved these a bit to make life easier.
In those component boxes, you’ll find rubber feet for horizontal mounting. There’s a few extra HDD bays and mounts for SSDs too. You’ll also find Y-split USB cables, screws, and all the usual fittings.
Then you have water cooling bracket fittings, more storage mounts, the PCIe expansion bracket, PSU mounting bracket, GPU riser cable and bracket. The list goes on. I’m bored of boxes of parts, so let’s get this beast built and see what it looks like put together!
OFFICIALLY LICENSED Built with matching firmware to seamlessly work with all models of PS5 and…
Pixart 3327 optical sensor with native DPI of up to 6, 200 Comfortable symmetric design…
✽[NOTES] An Aqara Zigbee 3.0 Hub is required and sold separately. The Aqara Cube T1…
Flight cloche with 4 firing triggers Dual speaker Riser included 17" monitor Light-up marquee Was…
14 games in 1 Wi-Fi Monitor 17” LCD Light Up Marquee 3D Coindoor Was £549.99…
Game in the Fast Lane: Play with hyper-fast, sub-1ms SLIPSTREAM CORSAIR WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY, or connect…