Inside


Two thumbscrews secure the side panels, providing easy access to the internals. As stated earlier, the interior is painted black, making this the perfect case for any Goths. This isn't really a huge deal, however, and you really can't see much of the interior once all of your components are installed and the side panels are back in place. Still, it does add a little something extra when you're looking through the window into the lit up interior.

Similar to many recent high-end cases, the power supply is located at the bottom of the chassis. There are four small rubber grommets at the bottom where the power supply will be installed, which can help reduce case vibrations and noise. There are also two rubber covers on the back that are useful for anyone looking at using external water cooling. You can pass tubes through these holes to an external radiator and/or reservoir.

The case includes two hard drive cages, each supporting three drives, initially installed in the middle and bottom locations. The bottom cage includes a 120mm fan, and you can install an optional 120mm fan on the other drive cages -- although it's probably not necessary from a cooling standpoint. Note that if you want to use more than three optical drives (Ed: Umm… why?), you'll need to remove one of the drive cages. That shouldn't be a problem for most users, unless you want to start up some sort of CD/DVD/BRD duplication factory.

Overall, the Nine Hundred Two is pretty close to actual ATX case specifications. Other than the power supply not being at the top, the cooling arrangement is pretty much standard fare. Air enters through the front of the chassis (passing through air filters) and cools the graphics cards, hard drives, etc. The top 200mm fan and rear 120mm fan serve as the exhaust, providing what should be more than adequate cooling. If you need or want more case fans, you can add a 120mm fan behind the second hard drive cage, along with another 120mm fan above the expansion slots.

Appearance Installing the Components
Comments Locked

56 Comments

View All Comments

  • pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    forgot to say, this also allows you to clean the filters much more easily (ala p180). another bonus for me :)
  • pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    ohhhh, antec antec antec! what have you done! ok, ignore the above, 900 two only has single circular holes, so looks like you can only mount any screws at the front in limited positions. the original has regular long sliding holes so you can screw front drives / bezels in at any position. i spose you could always drill some more...
  • AstroGuardian - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    This case is not as good as you say it is. The temperatures are the lowest during the first week of usage. After a week the case is filled with dust and fibers and it creates a risk of overheating of components especially hard drives.

    I think it's quite stupid that Antec do not put filters behind the front plates. If anyone enjoys opening the case and disassembling the PC just to clear out the tons of dust, than this case is just for you
  • pepsimax2k - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    900 two has front filters behind the front fans (and side); only the original 900 lacked them. Although they're easy to add even on the original (see my post below).
  • slashbinslashbash - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    Why has nobody managed to improve upon the original gamer case, the Antec Dragon, aka Chieftec Dragon, aka Antec SX1040, etc? I bought mine like 8 years ago and I still haven't gotten a new case, because I look at the other cases and think "my Dragon has more room than this, and is better constructed!" I'm not an xxxtreme overclocker, so I really don't care about cooling that much. The 2 rear 80m fans in my Dragon work just fine.

    Things I love about my Dragon: A) Tons of room; B) Easy to customize front bezel LED's; C) removable HDD trays and nicely designed optical drive sleds; D) a huge window; E) nice color choices (I have mine in blue and it still looks better than 90% of cases out there); F) Sturdy as hell (I sit on it all the time); G) nice sturdy latch and nicely-opening side door (no stupid little slots that you have to line up). It still blows my mind that nobody offers a case with all these things, and more. It is big enough to fit all of the HDD's and a long video card, but I have do have to take out the video card to remove the HDD trays. In that respect, something with sideways-inserted HDD's would be better. I also with it had workable front USB, FW, and audio. (I know some later Dragons had these features, mine does not.) Other than those things, there is not much to improve on this design which has been around since roughly 2000. If Antec still sold the exact same case, I would buy it again now, no doubt.
  • JeBarr - Saturday, February 14, 2009 - link

    Yep, the egg still sells chieftec dragon for 100 bucks and worth every penny IMO.
  • Zak - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    The same reason I'm sticking to my aging, slightly moded CM Stacker 810. With two overclocked 285s, overclocked i7 and 12 hard drives it's cool and nearly silent and still there is room to add more stuff. Except for looks I don't see any better cases out there now in the <$200 range. Heck, even among the expensive ones there isn't anything appealing. I like that behemoth ABS Canyon case but some strange design decisions were made and IMHO it has a few deal-breaking problems, in particular considering the price. The Raven is a nice attempt at innovation, but fails in many areas. We're still using cases that pretty much have the same layout and features as they had 10 years ago.

    Z.
  • direfox - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    Awesome photography! Its hard to get good pictures of all black objects but you guys did a great job and I finally get to see what the case really looks like.
  • cactusdog - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    Do it got Emails?


    Its ok but not my style.
  • hob196 - Friday, February 13, 2009 - link

    How come the Idle System temperatures get higher when the fan's running faster? Is this a chart snafu?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now