Friday, October 7th 2016
SilverStone Announces the Case Storage Series CS380 Chassis
Drive bays in mid- and full-tower cases becoming fewer by the days, making room for larger add-on cards and cooling contraptions. SilverStone announced a premium case for those seeking more drive bays, the Case Storage series CS380. This case is ideal for video-editing rigs and home-servers. The star-attraction here is its storage area, which includes two 5.25-inch drive bays, and eight hot-swappable 3.5-inch drive bays with SATA back-planes, which are compatible with 2.5-inch drives. The caddies are shielded by a lockable ABS front-door.
The CS380 is made almost entirely of steel. The motherboard tray serves up space for add-on cards up to 24 cm in length, and CPU coolers up to 14.6 cm in height. Its cooling system includes a pair of 120 mm fans (included) ventilating the drive cage, two 120 mm top exhausts, and a 120 mm exhaust. Front-panel connectivity includes a pair of USB 3.0 ports. The case measures 215.3 mm x 487.5 mm x 426.5 mm (WxDxH). The company didn't reveal pricing.
The CS380 is made almost entirely of steel. The motherboard tray serves up space for add-on cards up to 24 cm in length, and CPU coolers up to 14.6 cm in height. Its cooling system includes a pair of 120 mm fans (included) ventilating the drive cage, two 120 mm top exhausts, and a 120 mm exhaust. Front-panel connectivity includes a pair of USB 3.0 ports. The case measures 215.3 mm x 487.5 mm x 426.5 mm (WxDxH). The company didn't reveal pricing.
25 Comments on SilverStone Announces the Case Storage Series CS380 Chassis
as much as I love hotswap drive cases, i'd have to pass on this one.
If they had done it with front intake and side-hotswappable HDDs, there'd been more cooling and space for the gpu.
There's also no OS drive mount inside... Molex power for the drives is SOO 2000 and then there's the overall look of this thing...
I've been looking for a case like this for ages, but every manufacturor seems to get it wrong...
that and sata connectors...
That said, I have used a case with a similar design that had fans mounted like this and vents on the opposite side panel, and hard drive temperatures were not great. The design of the hot-swap trays (open vs closed), the amount of space between them for air to flow over and through, is vital - but of course Silverstone's photos don't show any of that.
www.silverstonetek.com/product.php?pid=709&area=en
there are much much better cases for people who just want to drop an mITX board w/ raid controller and have 8 hotswap drives.
personally I'm looking at the 2 below which support SAS on the backplanes.
or this one
or you get a cheap atx case with lots of 5 1/4 bays and add these: my current method.
or you switch to rackmount cases and silly amounts of hotswap bays and sas backplane.
I'd be tempted to go with what already works well as @slozomby pointed out.
Regardless, not a bad attempt to make it work for Silverstone, trying not too hard to copy the standard server-hot swap bays...though it would be nice if the bays had LED indicators. I do like that about server-grade cases with proper backplanes.
This is for home servers and storage solutions. It is not designed to be a gaming PC.
and i'd consider anyone building a nas in their house to be an enthusiast.
Anyhow I completely agree with you that there are far better and easier ways to get a lot of drives in a hot-swap solution. Problem is, hot-swap tends to be stupidly expensive.
I've gone the same route as you: my retired HAF 932 has six 5.25" bays, 4 of which are currently occupied by IcyDock 5.25"-to-3.5" modules for a total of six 3.5" drives currently. Not hot-swappable, but easy to get access to which is more my priority.
A proper server chassis with hot-swap bays is my dream, but I'd have to pay stupid amounts of money to import one, so... nope.
New here... I'm currently trying to figure out a home NAS/server setup with hot-swap, so was very interested when I heard of the CS380. I'd originally been interested in their DS380, but it's only for Mini-ITX and I want an ATX/micro-ATX form factor for better expansion.
Sorry for the late reply, but only recently found the thread. slozomby, would you mind posting a link to the 2nd case above (I assume the first is a U-Nas NSC-800)? Yes, otherwise I'm thinking of doing the same with a Sharkoon T9. With 9 5.25" bays, it'll fit 12-15 drives with three 4-in-3 or 5-in-3 hotswap cages, and an ATX mobo. I've seen several reports of people using them for many-drive setups.
the 1st case is
www.amazon.com/dp/B01HFDHBBK/?tag=tec06d-20
the second is
www.ipcdirect.net/itx-s8-black-mini-itx-form-computer-storage-case/