Conclusion: In a Class of Its Own

SilverStone's engineers have produced a stunningly unique and very attractive piece of kit in the FT03. It's one of their crown jewels and justifiably so: the FT03 has excellent thermal design, decent noise with the stock fans at stock speed, and if you're into the minimalistic look it's frankly just plain nice to look at. In fact, that's really the main draw of the FT03: the case is uniquely designed in a way that's both aesthetically pleasing and eye-catching while being remarkably functional. Assembly is remarkably simple, and the case is capable of housing a tremendous amount of performance. I'd be considering using it for my own tower if I didn't need more than the four internal drive bays as well as a dedicated 5.25" bay.

Compared to the positives, the weak points of the FT03 are comparatively minor. Noise remains an issue but not an unsolvable one (though I'm concerned about more powerful cards like the GTX 580). The side panels and bottom grate also come off far too easily.

My biggest complaint about the FT03 may actually be its hidden costs. You can get the case for $169 up front, but that's really not the end of the additional expenses using it can incur. First, you have to use a slimline slot-loading optical drive (and there's no access to the button either, you have to use the operating system to eject the drive). These things don't grow on trees and they easily cost twice as much as a conventional optical drive. That gets compounded if you're like me and need a blu-ray reader/writer, where suddenly you're looking at paying at a bare minimum $200 for the privilege. At least there's a cheap solution to this: buy an external.

Second, and thankfully at least a little less egregious, you need a small, modular power supply. Let's be realistic here: if you're willing to spend $169 just on the case and then cheap out on the power supply, you're going to get exactly what you pay for and probably what you deserve. Most serious builders are going to go for something modular anyhow, but in this case it's essential. While SilverStone's short modular cable kit isn't absolutely essential, it's preferable, and that adds yet another expense.

Finally, if you're like me you'll want to invest in a fan controller, and given the form factor and design of the FT03 that really doesn't leave many options. Once again the best one available is going to be the one I used for the GD04, Xigmatek's expansion slot fan controller.

When all is said and done, though, if you're not the kind of person the SilverStone FT03 appeals to, none of these things matter. You probably weren't planning on spending this much on a case anyhow and you're not interested in the conversation piece, and that's fine. But if you took a look at the FT03 and thought it was a slick piece of engineering like I did, this review should read like almost nothing but good news. You'll need to invest a bit more to really make the most of it, but you were already considering investing in it anyhow, and in exchange you get a case that's both attractive and remarkably functional. All things considered, that's worth at least a Bronze Editor's Choice award. I'd be anxious to see what would happen if SilverStone worked those minor kinks out.

Noise and Thermal Testing, GeForce GTX 580
Comments Locked

81 Comments

View All Comments

  • Metaluna - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    The consensus over at SPCR is that the white plastic grilles make it look like a cheap clothes hamper :).

    Kudos to Silverstone for trying something unique. Sadly not every radical concept works out, but I hope they keep trying.
  • Egglick - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    I agree that the white plastic vents look terrible on the silver model. If you look at the Black version though, it's a huge improvement.
  • bman212121 - Monday, May 2, 2011 - link

    And one day you accidently overheat your computer when you mistakely throw your clothes on top of it...
  • darkvader75 - Thursday, May 19, 2011 - link

    I agree that it should be either clear plexi right there or just drilled holes in the alluminum
  • Th-z - Monday, August 8, 2011 - link

    That's the removable dust filter.

    ---
    AnandTech, you guys should mention any dust filter feature in your case review.
  • ckryan - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    This is far and away one of the most interesting case designs out there. Unique cases are not plentiful and Silverstone at least has a couple to offer. I like cases that are a little different, ones like the Lian Li A05 which reverses airflow and motherboard placement to focus cool air one the processor. In that way, the FT03 is not alone, but it's not a huge crowd either. With enough money to spend on the extras, the Silverstone seems like it would make a fantastic system. Too bad slim line ODDs are the devil.
  • michael2k - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Mac_G4_Cube

    Not really that unique. Vertical square orientation, upward ventilzation, etc.
  • mados123 - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    Exactly. That was one of the earliest designs that I saw from Apple where my jaw dropped due to its creative thermodynamics and use of Acrylic.
  • nubie - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    They took an idea that has been floating around in my head and made it work.

    Vertical cooling and square footprint (or nearly). Also access to all ports without going behind the PC.

    I can't afford it, but it is nice to know it is out there.

    Fantastic, very forward thinking. I hope this spawns more (Lian Li are you listening? Maybe Power Cooler too for those like me: short on the green stuff.)
  • SilthDraeth - Thursday, April 28, 2011 - link

    I am guessing that was a strange attempt at a pun, or you were still hung up about noise levels!

    :P

    Back to reading the rest of the review now...

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now