Internal Design

Removing the cover of the X-QPack is as easy as unscrewing the three thumbscrews in the back and sliding it off. In this shot you can still see the protective film covering the inside of the three transparent windows.


Click to Enlarge


Another of just the cover, this time with the protective film removed.


Click to Enlarge


This is one of the most useful shots of the X-Pack, as it gives you the best overall idea how the case is arranged internally.


Click to Enlarge


We can immediately see the two distinct areas of the chassis; the higher of the two for the drives, power supply, and exhaust, and the lower for the motherboard, add-on cards, and, as we found out after we put a system into the unit, excessive cable clutter.

Before the power supply is taken out, the case seems like it'd be impossible to work in, and in practice we found this to be quite true.


Click to Enlarge


Once it's taken out though, there is actually quite a bit of free space inside the QPack. Here we can see all of the possible locations of the computer's drives. There's space for two hard drives, two 5.25", and one more 3.5", be it external or internal. It even looks as though a courageous modder could squeeze another one or two hard drives on the opposite side, or possibly components for a water-cooling setup.


Click to Enlarge


External Design Internal Design cont’d
Comments Locked

66 Comments

View All Comments

  • Questioner - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    I have this case with the MSI Radeon Xpress 200 MB with an AMD64 (Venice)3200+, 4 sticks of Geil 512MB PC3200(With Blue heatsinks)ATI 550 Pro TV Tuner card, VIA Vinyl Sound card, 2 Plextor SATA DVD/DVDRW drives, 2 Segate 120GB SATA drives,Mitsume 3.5 floppy drive with built in smart card reader,Gigabyte cpu cooler with blue led fan, blue led SATA power connectors, UV SATA drive cables,Logitech MX 1000 laser mouse, Logisys lighted blue keyboard and Sceptre 19" LCD 12ms. The question about can full sized power supplies be used is yes, only if you use Liteon or Sony optical drives because they are shorter than the other drives. This case is great it is very quiet and cool the motherboard lacks any overclocking options but I was able to push it to 2.2gHz with a software tweak and it was stable and I didn't need any other voltage tweaks to do it. If any one wants pictures of my system I would be glad to show it if I knew how to post pictures on Anandtech, plus my system is alot neater than what the Anand's reveiw looks like because I have alot less cable clutter than Anand's, plus I did a little cable modding to make it look better.
  • at80eighty - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    #30 , did you even read my disclaimer?

    thanx for the answers though :p
  • bbomb - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    How does this case compare to an Antec Aria? Its a pity they didnt compare the two as they are very similiar looking from the outside.
  • IPSecGuy - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    Great review - thanks for the in depth info.

    Just a couple of (hopefully) quick questions;

    1 - What MicroATX mobo's would you recommend for this case? I have looked at some Intel 915 foxconn and ASUS mobo's and have also looked at some AMD 939 based MicroATX boards. AMD vs Intel aside, which would be your top pick from each camp? (btw - haven't seen one with SATA-II support, so if you are aware of one let me know)

    2 - Assuming that selecting a mATX board with pci-x16 is a given, do you think the PSU included with this case would support a vid-card such as a nVidia 6800GT/Ultra or the newer 7800GTX?

    Thanks for your time!
  • deathwalker - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

  • KristopherKubicki - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    Olaf van der Spek: Aren't there like four MicroBTX boards on the whole market? And aren't two of them based on 915G? I'll pass.

    Kristopher
  • Gholam - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    #29, did you even read the article? This is a case, not an SFF barebone system. It has nothing to do with SATA or SLI. It will accept pretty much any mATX motherboard, which DFI LanParty isn't. Abit is rumored to have a mATX SLI board in the works, but nobody has seen it yet. The PSU can be replaced, but the space is tight, and you'll have to use a short 5.25" drive to leave enough room for it, and fitting a long PSU such as Antec Phantom is out of the question.
  • at80eighty - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    utter n00b questions :-

    1) SATA 2 supported?
    2) SLI - capable?
    3) Can a mobo like the DFI LanParty fit in this case?
    4) Can the PSU be replaced with something like a Antec Neopower?


    Appreciate any help :)
  • Olaf van der Spek - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    #25: MicroBTX?
  • vfxraven19 - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    I bought this case and love it! I think this is better than the Antec Aria, but the Aria is still a nice case...

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now