Xclio Touch 767 Full-Tower PC Chassis Review
Peter Donnell / 12 years ago
So with the build complete we can see there is an awful lot going on here, for lack of a better word things are looking a little crowded, with what seems to be a colossal amount of cabling running from every conceivable direction inside this chassis. The Antec 920 has more than enough to breath though, fitting nicely in the rear of the chassis, and it has a relatively unobstructed airflow in the top half of the case.
Further down we can see that while there are a lot of cables floating around here, it’s really not as bad as it seems, but having the SSD mounted sideways has left some cables trailing towards the motherboard and the bottom cable management cut-out is stretched to it’s limits behind the power supply, but looks can be deceiving, there is still a lot of open space here and I doubt the airflow in the bottom of the chassis will be that unobstructed with the components we have installed.
With the side panel back on, we can see that the mesh window gives us a really good view of the inside of the system, unfortunately it shows off that mess of cables too.
Around the back things are looking much neater, with everything in place we can see our graphics card has plenty of breathing room and that there is a lot of clearance between the GPU and the power supply.
Overall the complete system looks pretty stylish, but it seems a shame to spoil that finned front panel with our DVD-Rom drive.