Xclio Touch 767 Full-Tower PC Chassis Review
Peter Donnell / 12 years ago
Now that we have the side panel off we can see that the menacing black paint job continues through this chassis, giving the whole thing a real heavy duty appearance, we can also see there are various cable management cut-outs as well as a large rear panel cut away from easy installation of the CPU cooler.
In the back of the chassis we can see the pre-installed 120mm fan, which comes fitted with a removable cover, which helps prevent cables from getting caught in the fan blades, very handy if your going to be installing massive amounts of fans and their required cables in a chassis like this. We can also see the 8 expansion slots come fitted with replaceable covers and quick release thumb screws for quick and easy installation of your devices. Further down the chassis we can also see there is a Velcro strap to help reduce any vibration from the PSU.
On the right hand side of the chassis we see that there is a vertical mounting plate for SSD and mechanical hard drives, which sports a rather complex looking, yet simple to use release mechanism.
Once removed we can see there is a further hard mounted installation bay in the bottom right hand side of the chassis as well as a 2nd removable vertical mounting panel to the rear of the chassis.
Around the back we can see the various cable management options that are available, starting with the large cutout at the top which is covered by a rubber grommet, a further 3 oval cut-outs below that, as well as a large vertical gap between the motherboard backplate and the vertical hard drive mounting panel, a further rubber grommet covered cut-out is located at the bottom centre of the chassis, which caters for the bulk of the cables from your PSU.