Wednesday, August 5th 2009

Lian Li launches PC-A70F/A71F Full Tower Chassis

Lian-Li Industrial Co. Ltd Ltd has launched the PC-A70F/71F Full Tower chassis ideal for power users and server systems. The hair-line brushed all black aluminum chassis features two fans on the front (2x 140mm@1000RPM), and 2x rear 120mm fans @1500RPM. The 7x PCI expansion slots enable CrossFire and SLI graphic card setups. The chassis front face has either a door assembly which can open from either side as needed (PC-A71F) or a front panel which clips off conveniently as needed (PC-A70F). The inlet fans have filters that are washable. The entire chassis is designed for tool-less implementation, so installing your hardware and getting your system up and running is extremely easy. The dimensions stand at 220mm x 590mm x 615mm ( W, H, D) for the PC-A71F, and 220mm x 590mm x 585mm ( W, H, D) for the PC-A70F.
Complete Tool-Less Design
The Lian Li patented unique Power Supply Bracket which allows the PSU to be secured using only the tool-less clasp is very useful to hold the PSU securely without the need for securing screws. The 10x internal HDD 3.5" bays have a tool-less bracket and are mounted with rubber grommet struts to prevent movement and vibration from today's fast moving and highly specialized HDD components. The locking mechanism slides into place and secures all the HDD's simultaneously. The PCI securing brackets are made of aluminum and have a special tool-less clip with rubber padding to secure your graphics and daughter cards with the utmost of ease. The front panel (PC-A71F) and top panel are easily detachable for access to fans and air filters. The PC-A70F/A71F chassis are imbued with all the functional and user friendly design aspects users have come to expect in high quality Lian Li cases.

Thermal features
Lian Li engineers have optimized the airflow to enter from the front mounted fans, directly cooling the HDDs and ODDs and thereafter refreshing the CPU region. The hot air generated by the CPU and GPU is directly extracted via the rear 120mm Fans. The volume of airflow is more than sufficient to keep your power rig cool and conveniently silent.
General features

The chassis supports 5x 5.25" Optical drive bays with one optional 1x 3.5" external and 10 internal 3.5" bays for HDDs giving ample room for future expansion. The PC-A70F/A71F full tower chassis support E-ATX, Micro-ATX or ATX motherboards and has 7 PCI expansion slots, which are well ventilated with special vented brackets when not in use. The top panel is removable with the multimedia I/O ports on the top panel consisting of 4x USB2.0, IEEE1394, ESATA, as well as HD+AC97 Audio.

Traditional Durability
The classical stylish functional design is the Lian Li goal. The essence of Lian Li products is the craftsmanship of the engineering. Intrinsic to the workmanship and quality is the customization which includes a whole host of optional extras that can be purchased to add more features to an already feature rich product.

For more details on features and extras available for the PC-A70F please go to this page. For more details on features and extras available for the PC-A71F please go to this page.
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7 Comments on Lian Li launches PC-A70F/A71F Full Tower Chassis

#1
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
this looks a like an awesome case for a server build - Imagine the HDD caddys filled out with terrabyte after terabyte of hard drives...... could easily have 10terrabytes inside that case
Posted on Reply
#2
AsRock
TPU addict
Like most of their cases this one included but it's their price tag i find a real killer.
Posted on Reply
#3
InnocentCriminal
Resident Grammar Amender
FreedomEclipsethis looks a like an awesome case for a server build - Imagine the HDD caddys filled out with terrabyte after terabyte of hard drives...... could easily have 10terrabytes inside that case
Hmmm 10 x 2TB drives. Hmmm.... Storage city.
Posted on Reply
#4
Fx
I like the PC-A70F but am not into showing off LEDs on the other
Posted on Reply
#5
pabloc74
nice components, but looks don'd says nothing to me, stacker 830 an cosmos s rules:toast:
Posted on Reply
#6
Soylent Joe
You could take out the HDD rack and put a 2x 120mm rad where it was, with the fans blowing out the front. >.>
Posted on Reply
#7
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
InnocentCriminalHmmm 10 x 2TB drives. Hmmm.... Storage city.
Or you could setup a file server & sell webspace - youd get the money you paid for the case back in less then a month
Posted on Reply
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