In and Around the Cubitek HPTX ICE

Given that aluminum is such an attractive and sought after finish on its own, Cubitek wisely avoids tarting the HPTX ICE up at all. The exterior is a simple black, with only the aluminum coloring itself appearing on the back of the enclosure. You could be forgiven for being a bit underwhelmed by the fairly standard (if wisely minimalistic) design language of the HPTX ICE, but in our opinion it's still better to err on the side of understatement than overstatement.

If anything, I do feel like Cubitek may have been a bit too conservative. Stop me if you've heard this before: one large fan grille at the bottom front that hides a 200mm blue LED intake fan, with a series of 5.25" bays above it, two LED indicator lights (power and IDE activity), and the power and reset buttons. On the top of the enclosure, two fan grilles for the 140mm blue LED exhaust fans, a pair of USB 2.0 and 3.0 ports, and audio jacks. Completely blank, solid sides. Nobody's going to accuse the HPTX ICE of being gaudy, but the design just isn't distinctive either.

Cubitek does change the program with the way the side panels are mounted, but unfortunately it's not an improvement. The side panels are simple and flat with nothing that really catches them on the rest of the enclosure other than that they basically line up with the trim of the HPTX ICE. Worse still are the screws Cubitek opts to use to secure them: one at each corner, but with a hex socket instead of the garden variety Phillips head. Even though Cubitek includes a basic allen wrench with the case, it's an unnecessary deviation from established convention. [Ed: And I'd rather have slightly larger thumbscrews.]

When you do open up the HPTX ICE, you'll see the basic enclosure layout, scaled up to accommodate HPTX-class motherboards. The power supply bay is at the bottom, but the fan filter is flimsy and difficult to actually keep lined up. There's a three thumbscrew locking mechanism for the internal 3.5" bays that's very similar to what Lian Li employs, rubber-lined cable routing holes in the motherboard tray, and a decent amount of space behind the tray for routing cables. The cutout in the tray is also substantial and should allow for just about any aftermarket heatsink's backplate to be installed without issue.

At this point, I need to register my misgivings with the HPTX ICE's packaging and, honestly, the construction materials. The styrofoam used to hold my review sample in place was broken in multiple places; it was just too thin. The box needed to be bigger and the styrofoam corner pads, by extension, needed to be thicker. Some of the hex screws that were holding the side panel in place had also actually fallen out in transit. I was told the packaging is being revised and beefed up so end users may not have the same problems I did. If this had been a steel enclosure these might not be such big issues anyhow, but that leads to my other problem: the aluminum itself.

For smaller enclosures I think an all-aluminum design is probably fine, but aluminum really brings with it a lot of issues most people don't think about initially. Aluminum is a relatively soft metal and it is extremely easy to scuff, scratch, or otherwise damage. In the basic manipulation the HPTX ICE went through in my testing, I actually managed to chip the finish in one place, and there are a couple of scuffs and scratches on the enclosure. Aluminum is a beautiful material and theoretically a good choice for radiating heat off of a powerful desktop, but the HPTX ICE felt flimsier than I would've liked--I'm not quite sure where the "thicker" materials are supposed to be.

Introducing the Cubitek HPTX ICE Assembling the Cubitek HPTX ICE
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  • colonelclaw - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    Referring to you photograph of the front of the case http://www.anandtech.com/Gallery/Album/1949#2

    If I had just spent $359 on anything in the world of computing, and it was put together as poorly as this I would be absolutely horrified. Not one single panel is flush with another and the shut lines are all over the place.
    I'm probably overreacting, but to me this looks like a photo of a $50 piece of junk
  • cjs150 - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    At least based on your assembly picture:

    1. Looks like there is room for a thin 240 radiator at the top

    2. Drop the drive cages, based on your review is not a loss!, and put a 200x200 radiator up front there is still plenty of space at bottom to resite the hard drives

    But at $359 I would not bother, silverstone does it far better
  • Dustin Sklavos - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    You can't install a 240mm radiator in the top. The way the two 140mm fan grills are spaced, I think you'd wind up having to modify the case a little to get it into place.
  • cjs150 - Monday, May 14, 2012 - link

    A little modification is fine but truthfully I am struggling to think of any reason to buy this case.

    maybe the smaller versions are better
  • Flunk - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    Lian-Li doesn't need steel reinforcement so it is possible to make a good all aluminum case. This just isn't it, and the price is almost 3x what an equivalent Lian-Li would cost.
  • etamin - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    This is a big assumption to make, but the price and quality of this case makes it seem like the company went way over budget on development and manufacturing costs and is struggling to stay afloat by hoping for inexperienced builders to jump on high price tags.

    I've seen Cubiteks on SundialMicro for at least a year and the lack of build quality is visible in the stock images. The cases are literally Lian Li and Silverstone knock offs at higher prices. Believe me, I mean no disrespect to the engineers and designers, but this is just the general effect these products give. Cubitek is a pretty new company (started 2010?) and I think it started off too ambitious without a realistic plan.
  • stren - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    At this price you're almost into the territory of CaseLabs where you'll get some very well designed cases with some unique features and support for real enthusiast builds. When will anandtech look at them?
  • HexiumVII - Friday, May 11, 2012 - link

    Why are all the new cases putting the PS on bottom. You now need 30 inches just to reach the 12v four pin on the top of motherboards.
  • SmCaudata - Saturday, May 12, 2012 - link

    So, out of curiosity I searched for the miniITX version and came across this.
    http://www.legitreviews.com/article/1922/1/
    Normally wouldn't link to an outside site, but it was just a fun idea. The small version is actually a decent looking case.
  • Stas - Tuesday, May 15, 2012 - link

    No, thanks. I'll take the Silverstone.

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