Noise and Thermal Testing, Overclocked

Here's where we separate the men from the boys. Our overclocked test bed has proven to be very stressful on "less prepared" enclosures, and this is hopefully going to produce some more decisive results. So far, Antec's P280 has put in a strong performance, offering decent thermals with low acoustics, but it's still competing pretty squarely with Fractal Design's Define R3, an enclosure that costs between $30 and $40 less. The R3 lost a lot of steam in our overclocked testing, though. Can the P280 pick up the slack?

CPU Temperatures, Overclocked

Chipset Temperatures, Overclocked

GPU Temperatures, Overclocked

DIMM Temperatures, Overclocked

SSD Temperatures, Overclocked

Unfortunately, while most of the other components are running pretty frosty, the P280 has a hard time dealing with the substantially increased thermal load of the overclocked i7-875K. What we can glean from the results is that it's able to mostly manage overall ambient temperature, and the GeForce GTX 580 runs nice and cool compared to some of the other cases, but the processor may just not be getting enough cool air running through it. The P280 supports 240mm radiators, and getting one in there may not be a bad idea.

Overclocked Noise Levels

Once again it's hard to justify running the fans at their high setting. At their low setting the P280 is nice and quiet at idle, though load performance is dicier. Once again the P280 is in the same general ballpark as Fractal Design's up and comer.

Noise and Thermal Testing, Stock Conclusion: A Matter of Time and Preference
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  • mwmccormick1 - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    I've used the p180 series in a few server builds and they have worked wonderfully.
  • furrymike - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Just bought the Corsair 400R. Now this review has me thinking. The Corsair is diappoiningly noisy and this new Antec should be quieter and is a looker. Not quit Corsair ease of assembly but close.
  • jfish2d - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Let's be honest. The flashy windows to view all the cool components are all well and good. But it's those who don't flaunt their junk who make successful ganks. This is exactly the case for doing just that. Somewhat normal on the outside (though beautiful), the Antec P280 is full of smart design and excellent execution.
  • siderst - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Sign me up!
  • GrJohnso - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Definitely a step in the right direction... Looks roomy enough without being quite the monster that my Corsair 800d is... Would make a nice addition to my stable... :)
  • funkstrong - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    I know Antec has the straight forward design look, but this could use some help styling-wise.
  • abnderby - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    in the past i have unfortunately usually opted for workstation chassis'. Mostly Intel ones due to having adequate drive options. IMO most of the so called power user and gamer cases were appalling in looks, case layout and drive options. I have never understood the whole 5 or 6 5 1/4 drive bays and only 3 or 4 3 1/2 bays for hard drives. I have 2 dvd drives and a usb card reader, I need hard disk space!

    So here we are a clean case all black inside and none of the hideous teenager looks on the outside. Very professional and adequate disk space. Way to go Antec, you did your home work.

    Question for testing though (being a Software QA guy) why is most all case testing with only 1 or 2 drives? Should we not max this thing out with the hottest PS, video cards and every drive bay filled and a fan in all slots? this would really tell us how quiet it is and just how cool it will be with everything going at once.

    i run currently 5 internal drives, OS, Temp, Data1 and data2, virtual machine drive, would run 6 if i had the room. I do not know what most power users run but normally if i have the space and connections available i fill them and use them for something.

    Anyway good article, great looking case it is a win, win for me and it would be next on my upgrade list
  • Nightmare9 - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Did anyone else think there were 2 motherborads in the photo with the video card installed? The color of the card they used is exactly the same at the case.

    I'd love to win one, I'm just about to build a new PC.

    Thanks
  • faZZter - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    Looks like a good case, would work great on my new build I am working on for ToR release.
  • doggod - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    As a P182 owner the design changes look good, the dual design in theory was good but in practice left a lot to be desired..Opening the door to power up the system was a niggle -system was rarely power down but trying to manipulate a large power supply and its cables in the bottom compartment was a pain with be having to dump the center fan. Having the motherboard a fraction on an inch above the divider was another unhappy experience with a rampage formula motherboard.

    What Ive never understood is why case designers
    (working to a standard designed between them and gpu manufactures)
    haven't put some sort of a way to funnel air from the front of a case to dump outside air as close as possible to the gpu fan which generally is the hottest component in a case, even by some sort of flexible construction.
    As it is its only the air within the case which is being heated by every other component that get drawn into the gpu .

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