Lian Li PC-60Plus

by Purav Sanghani on February 26, 2005 12:00 PM EST

Internal Design of the PC-60 Plus

As soon as we open the PC-60 Plus, we are taken back to the design of the PC-6070. At the front, the 5-1/4” drive bays are designed the same – as a single piece of metal folded around, which extends all the way to the back of the case at the sides of the power supply mount. None of the drive bays are tool-less, which we weren’t expecting due to Lian Li’s track record for leaving tool-less features out of their products. Each drive requires screws (provided with the case) to be mounted to the drive bays, which proves to be secure and tight to keep the drives from moving around during operation.


Click to enlarge.


The only change that we see are the two 3-1/2” bays directly under the 5-1/4” bays instead of three as we mentioned earlier. They are meant for floppy drives, memory card readers, etc. - anything that requires external access on the front bezel. The PC-60 had three of these while the PC-60 Plus only has two, which is enough for typical home and business user applications.


The PC-60 Plus also features the same removable HDD cage that we found on the PC-6070. It can hold up to five 3-1/2” HDDs vertically or three HDDs mounted horizontally with the included cage partition. The drive cage is secured to the case by two thumbscrews and can be removed by sliding the cage out through the open side of the case.


As we shift our eyes to the back of the case, we see the expansion slots use thumbscrews to secure any add-in card that we would want to install like our 9800XT video card. One thing we notice is that the frame of the case interferes when using a screwdriver to install or remove these thumbscrews.


It isn’t really a big issue, since they are thumbscrews, but the option to use a screwdriver easily always adds a few points to the final judging of the case.

External Design of the PC-60 Plus Cooling Hardware
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  • val - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    29,32: you are also right. 140euro for CM stacker was very nice price for perfect case. But LianLi is not the way to go.
    With CM you get two silent 120mm and one silent 80mm fan, 6 USB, FW on top, 12 5,25" positions and rubber mounted 4in 3 HDD holder. Case is not too heavy, have alu sides, removable mainboard tray, two power supply holders, many accesorries. EATX, BTX,...
    And - it is aluminium where it makes sense (sides) and looks awesome. Best case ever for all needs except SFF.
  • Noli - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Totally agree #25

    Like the plain elegant style but at that price I really want it much quieter and (near) tooless. And why haven't they bothered putting the external ports higher?! Mid- or top of case makes much more sense IMHO. Sounds to me like Antec are making cases that are both better and cheaper. It's a no brainer. Now if we could combine Lian Li style with Antec features...
  • stromgald - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Does anybody know how heavy it is? I'm looking for a very lightweight ATX case, and since this is all aluminum construction, it should be pretty light. My other choice would be an Antec Super Lanboy. Its hard to find information on the weights of LianLi cases (couldn't find it on their website) to make a comparison.
  • WileCoyote - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Not much better than the original. The new features are all very gimmicky. The PC-60 was good back in the day but there's a lot of better options now. I have two complaints about my PC-60: sometimes the case vibrates from the fans and some power supplies don't fit. My case doesn't have any front usb ports either. I still think it looks awesome.
  • defter - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Who is buying these cases? You pay $150 and get a case with a four case fans and 54dB noise level???

    I rather get a plain $20 case with zero case fans and a quiet $50 power supply.
  • XRaider - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Nevermind about the sideways mounting - went back and read it again. "or three HDDs mounted horizontally with the included cage partition. "
    but no rubber grommets :(
  • XRaider - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    Ok case. Not thrilled with the way the HDD mounts on it's side and no rubber grommets... oh well. The air holes for the videocard fan seem small for efficient airflow, no?
    Also - "One thing we notice is that the frame of the case interferes when using a screwdriver to install or remove these thumbscrews" I guess if you can get ur fat fingers in there then your alright.
    I've noticed that Lian Li likes the single 80mm fan in the rear of the case - wouldn't dual 80's be better?
  • val - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    sorry for language. too less sleepin
  • val - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    i believe that myth of Lian Li is driven by the fact that in the past there were not much alu only case manufacturers in the past. now is lianli without much inovations only living from that "name"

    but there is already long time much better cases for much better price available.
  • theways - Sunday, February 27, 2005 - link

    All Lian Li's are very plain, very loud, and only hold bragging rights for the amount of money spent on them. Innovation is a concept lost with these case designers, left by the wayside long ago with originality and style.

    If you want a sleek lightweight aluminum case with quiet 120mm fans, a well built and quiet hard drive rack, and very interesting modding capabilities, I'd get the Antec superLANboy for $80 or less. Hell for the price of a Lian Li you could get 2.

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