Noise and Thermal Testing

If the noise and thermal testing bordered on being academic for the Fractal Design Define Mini, it's even more out of place with the Corsair Obsidian 350D. The Define Mini lends itself well to liquid cooling, but the 350D was outright designed for it, and that substantially reduces the importance of air cooling performance. As a result, our conventional testing isn't just beneath the 350D's pay grade, it's not even at the same place of business.

With all that said, though, there are still a few things to learn here. Remember that the 350D starts at $99, making it an affordable enough starting point for the end user who just wants a classy, easy-to-build chassis.

Ambient temperature during testing was around 22C.

CPU Load Temperatures (IGP)

SSD Load Temperatures (IGP)

Thermally the Obsidian 350D puts in a fairly healthy performance. Competitive without being spectacular, it mostly suffers from being an offshoot of the basic ATX case design. Air cooling thermals have never been Corsair's strong suit, but they've always been workable, and the 350D continues that trend.

Idle Noise Levels (Stock)

Load Noise Levels (Stock)

Because the 350D is able to keep thermals reasonably low, noise stays low as well. The vanilla testbed is nowhere near stressful enough to really work the 350D.

CPU Load Temperatures (with GTS 450 Eco)

GPU Load Temperatures (with GTS 450 Eco)

SSD Load Temperatures (with GTS 450 Eco)

When you add even a modest dedicated graphics card, Corsair starts playing that old familiar song. The plastic "cage" used for the SSD doesn't seem to be particularly detrimental to its temperatures, but even the direct airflow from the front fan onto the GTS 450 Eco isn't really adequate. CPU thermals remain solid, though.

Idle Noise Levels (with GTS 450 Eco)

Load Noise Levels (with GTS 450 Eco)

Idle noise continues to be a non-issue. Load noise isn't terrible, but it's not very impressive, either. While Fractal Design's case has a lot of acoustic padding and is built with heavy steel to help insulate noise, the 350D has no such allowances, and noise becomes entirely dependent on the efficiency of the cooling system.

CPU Load Temperatures (with GTX 560 Ti)

GPU Load Temperatures (with GTX 560 Ti)

SSD Load Temperatures (with GTX 560 Ti)

Adding a more robust video card only reinforces what we've already learned. CPU cooling performance is above average, but GPU cooling performance continues to be middling. These cards are using open air coolers that will tax the case's cooling system, and the middling stock cooling (one 140mm intake and one 120mm exhaust in their typical ATX locations) doesn't do the 350D any favors.

Idle Noise Levels (with GTX 560 Ti)

Load Noise Levels (with GTX 560 Ti)

Noise levels are reasonable. The cooler on our GTX 560 Ti can be pretty rough on any enclosure (and is outright hostile when the 560 is overclocked), but at least the 350D isn't getting overwhelmed.

Testing Methodology Conclusion: Might Be What You Were Waiting For
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  • shadess - Friday, May 17, 2013 - link

    http://sawater.ucoz.net/
  • shadess - Friday, May 17, 2013 - link

    shadess.
  • debellator - Monday, July 22, 2013 - link

    Great review. Case looks really good. Do you think Scythe Grand Kama Cross cooler will fit inside ?
  • okron1k - Monday, September 16, 2013 - link

    i love the look of this case, however i think it was a big mistake to not include support for more 3.5" drives. a removable hard drive cage that would sit in the middle between the ssd mounts and the bottom cage would have been perfect.
  • xslavic - Saturday, April 19, 2014 - link

    Great little case.cant be smaller.Liqtech 240 almost is inside of one 5.25" slots.
    3cm between my psu and the edge of the pcb.Just enough to squeeze in that space about 50cfm of cooling from the two front 140mm fans.
    What i found usefull is the ppssibilty to remove the 2x3.5" case i use one ssd + 1 wd black 2.5" and thats enough fro me having a separate nas for my content.
    Would recommend it if you will pay the 96 eur i paid for it.

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