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Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case
Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case








corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case
  1. Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case full#
  2. Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case Pc#

Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case Pc#

If you're fully using SSDs/PCIe storage, then you can just remove the 3.5" housing and it won't matter. Hidden cable management and an airflow-optimized front panel make building a clean, cool PC easy, with two included CORSAIR AirGuide fans. My power cables are able to bend up and over the housing, but only just barely, it's much tighter fit than it ought to be. One other issue: the housing for 3.5" hard drives butts up a bit too close to the back of the power supply, especially if you have a larger power supply (mine is a Corsair 850W). A steel front panel offers optimal airflow to your components, accompanied by two included 120mm AirGuide fans designed with anti-vortex vanes that enhance cooling. None of this would be necessary if not for the superfluous side fan slots. The CORSAIR 5000D AIRFLOW is a mid-tower ATX case with easy cable management for a clean build, with room for a 360mm push pull radiator, a high-airflow front panel, and two included CORSAIR AirGuide fans for concentrated airflow. The CORSAIR 4000D AIRFLOW is a mid-tower ATX case with easy cable management and exceptional cooling.

corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case

Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case full#

While not as big on the outside as a full tower, its brilliantly engineered. The "cable guard" also butts up uncomfortably close to the edge of my GPU (it's touching an exposed radiator). The 5000D AIRFLOW isnt your run-of-the-mill, standard mid-tower ATX case. What you need to do is to thread everything through a pair of rectangular cable cutouts next to the motherboard, but this will require removing the rubber things that come mounted on the cutouts, because they get in the way of thick power cables. I removed it, thinking I would throw it out, but once I was all finished with my setup I realized the airflow leakage problem I'd created, and had disassemble almost everything to get it back in. You can remove it to get it out of the way, but it's an incredible pain to get it in and out. It does help covering up some loose cables from visibility, but it sits tight up against the motherboard and leaves a crevice too narrow for threading thick power cables. Corsair addresses this leak issue with a metal sheet (a "cable guard"), that sits between the two sets of fan slots, but I *despise* that cable guard. I don't see how it adds anything to the fan slots in the front (would you really populate all six fan slots?), and it creates a problem of air intake from the front potentially leaking out the unoccupied fan slots on the side, which are directly adjacent. There is a triple fan slot along the side, which creates more trouble than it's worth.










Corsair 5000d airflow tempered glass atx mid tower case