Monday, April 15th 2013
Corsair Obsidian 350D M-ATX Chassis Pictured
In addition to its latest flagship Obsidian 900D chassis, Corsair plans to launch a new premium micro-ATX gaming PC case this season, the Obsidian 350D (model: CC-9011029-WW). It posed for pictures at various retailers, and some of its press-shots were leaked to the web. Reportedly measuring 450 x 210 x 440 mm, the case will retain the solid matte steel construction with a brushed aluminium front, and a large side acrylic window. Its front-panel features two 5.25-inch drive bays, a pair of USB 3.0 ports, and HD audio jacks.
Internally, the Obsidian 350D doesn't feature any drive cages that can go on to obstruct long graphics cards. Instead, it features two 3.5-inch bays towards its bottom, and what appear to be three 2.5-inch bays towards the top portion, with a gap in between. Ventilation includes two 140 mm fan vents on the top, to which radiators can be latched on to (one 140 mm spinner included), and a rear 120 mm fan (included). The Obsidian 350D should be released some time towards late-April or early-May.
Internally, the Obsidian 350D doesn't feature any drive cages that can go on to obstruct long graphics cards. Instead, it features two 3.5-inch bays towards its bottom, and what appear to be three 2.5-inch bays towards the top portion, with a gap in between. Ventilation includes two 140 mm fan vents on the top, to which radiators can be latched on to (one 140 mm spinner included), and a rear 120 mm fan (included). The Obsidian 350D should be released some time towards late-April or early-May.
32 Comments on Corsair Obsidian 350D M-ATX Chassis Pictured
I've said, Corsair is the perfect company to build a Micro-ATX case for a mainstream system that could use a H55 mounted off the back, no vents on top to save on the overall size and curtail on the noise emission. Something that could be befitting as a sleek business box or home APU build, that doesn’t need maintenance or that little extra height that such bottom PSU like this really requires. There nothing wrong nice top mount PSU for a mainstream build, using say the modular CX430M, while a sleek front intake grill that opens/remove simply so the filter can be cleaned. Just one 5.25 and a 3.5 front bay for an optional card reader, and some sound damping on the side panels.
I would argue this is about as small as you can get away with to build a power house multi gpu matx build without having a radiator external, because, well it's not a power house if it's running air or a 120mm rad which air will beat anyway.
The case looks like a 5 slot design, allowing you to run multi gpu on boards like the M3 which their second PEG slot is the lowest slot on the board... or just run waterblocks. The only realistic way to cool non blower type video cards would be side panel fans.
wish the top fan locations was more offset, to allow thicker rads though :\
Why argue… I'm actually saying the same thing! Yes this is about as condensed you'd get away with for a power house gaming build, although I said it's still more a Mid-tower size. (please re-read)
I’d love to drop $50-60 for really sophisticated looking chassis for moderate builds that's avant-garde in business atmosphere. Yes it had been the Antec NSK 3480 which is now dated, no longer available and if found expensive. Only others that's in that realm today is a SilverStone SST-PS07B at $70, while then it’s $100 for Fractal or LIAN LI. That leaves the new Rosewill LINE-M Micro-ATX Mini Tower for $55 and reason it $55 is it's the only viable although expensive choice. Got another choice? :cool: