Construction

The 0.8 mm SECC steel construction of the VM3000A makes for a solid and sturdy design that can handle the usual daily applications for a desktop case. The shell is fully EMI shielded as is the standard today. A minor weakness in using steel is the occurrence of sharp edges where the metal has been cut. The inside as well as the backside of the VM3000A have many sharp edges that could have been reduced by folding them over or sanding/smoothing them. In the dark, a hand in the wrong place could lead to a painful cut, or worse, a sliced cable.

The front bezel itself is made of Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene plastic, which is low cost, yet very durable.



Click to enlarge.


The VM3000A has security features like a key lock for the front panel, a special stopper for the right panel on the inside, rear side loops for a pad lock as well as electronic intrusion system support for motherboards that has this capability.

Case Fans Expansion
Comments Locked

15 Comments

View All Comments

  • KristopherKubicki - Thursday, March 11, 2004 - link

    Purav has been with us for a couple years, but this is his pilot review :) Congrats Purav - much better than my pilot ;)

    Kristopher
  • CZroe - Thursday, March 11, 2004 - link

    "The Thermaltake Xaser III VM3000A's main feature is its completely screw-less design. Though it can be difficult to deal with some screw-less features, such as drive mounting rails, Thermaltake has done a great job with the design and construction of its chassis."

    Umm, I must know: Is it as "great" a job as the ThermalTake Xaser III chassis? I've already posted in the forums about it (See the URL below), but basically the chassis' screwless slot design prevented full-length PCI cards from being inserted even though the case had special slots to stabilize them (Full length PCI cards have a plastic handle which fits the slots).

    There aren't enough pictures to tell if the case even has these slots, so I must ask :) Also, a better description of the "swing bar" is needed as well as an image. I'm still confused as to how it can stabilize a PCI card...

    http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview.cfm?catid=...
  • klah - Thursday, March 11, 2004 - link

    Hey Purav, have any pictures of the interior with all of the components installed?
  • sandorski - Thursday, March 11, 2004 - link

    I got 1 of these cases 3 weeks ago, I really like it. The flashing light is kinda hokey, but overall the screwless design and appearance of the case really impress me. The case looks and feels solid.

    The review was entirely correct about installing the power supply, it is very difficult if the mobo, cpu, and cpu hs/fa is installed. I managed to get my old noisy 350watt Enermax in, but only after removing the rear fan shroud first.
  • tfranzese - Thursday, March 11, 2004 - link

    Near identical to this SilverStone I looked at, but I dig the SST's looks far more. Anywho, I just wonder if the design flaws were fixed.

    Case I'm referring to is here: http://www.soundcardcentral.com/reviews/cases/sst-...

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now