Tuesday, September 14th 2021
Thermaltake Tower 100 Mini Chassis Now in Metallic Gold
Thermaltake, the leading PC DIY premium brand for Cooling, Gaming Gear, and Enthusiast Memory solutions, is thrilled to introduce The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis, a brand new member to our multicolored series products. A gold case is rarely found on the market, and it is also the new variant to the current Black, Snow, Turquoise,and Racing Green editions. The boldness and uniqueness of The Tower 100 Metallic Gold brings yet another vibe to make both your PC build and your room gleam. PC enthusiasts can match the Metallic Gold case with the TOUGHRAM RGB Metallic Gold to form the ideal PC build in a more comprehensive style and to further achieve the "Your MOD, Your Way" spirit.
Carrying on the unique vertically-designed appearance beloved by users, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold is a much smaller version of the classic The Tower 900 with the dimensions of 462.8 mm (Height), 266 mm (Width), 266 mm (Depth), which aims at giving more flexibility to users who are concerned with space arrangement. The Tower 100 Metallic Gold provides panoramic viewing by featuring three 4 mm tempered glass windows at the front, left, and right sides. Additionally, the two 120 mm standard fans preinstalled and the sophisticated internal layout helps to provide a smooth air intake and exhaust to keep the interior temperature low, guarantying outstanding cooling performance. What's more, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold has good hardware compatibility, supporting a CPU cooler with a maximum height of 190 mm, VGA with a maximum length of 330 mm, a power supply with a length of up to 180 mm, two 2.5" SSDs with the side bracket, and two 2.5" or two 3.5" HDD at the rear (without rear fan).Thermaltake The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is expected to be available for purchase in Q4 2021. For all PC enthusiasts who looking for a Mini-ITX case, if the specialness and boldness are your considerations, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is there for you.
Availability and Warranty
Thermaltake The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is expected to be available for purchase in Q4 2021. It is backed by a 3-year warranty and supported by the Thermaltake worldwide customer service and technical support network.
Carrying on the unique vertically-designed appearance beloved by users, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold is a much smaller version of the classic The Tower 900 with the dimensions of 462.8 mm (Height), 266 mm (Width), 266 mm (Depth), which aims at giving more flexibility to users who are concerned with space arrangement. The Tower 100 Metallic Gold provides panoramic viewing by featuring three 4 mm tempered glass windows at the front, left, and right sides. Additionally, the two 120 mm standard fans preinstalled and the sophisticated internal layout helps to provide a smooth air intake and exhaust to keep the interior temperature low, guarantying outstanding cooling performance. What's more, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold has good hardware compatibility, supporting a CPU cooler with a maximum height of 190 mm, VGA with a maximum length of 330 mm, a power supply with a length of up to 180 mm, two 2.5" SSDs with the side bracket, and two 2.5" or two 3.5" HDD at the rear (without rear fan).Thermaltake The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is expected to be available for purchase in Q4 2021. For all PC enthusiasts who looking for a Mini-ITX case, if the specialness and boldness are your considerations, The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is there for you.
Availability and Warranty
Thermaltake The Tower 100 Metallic Gold Mini Chassis is expected to be available for purchase in Q4 2021. It is backed by a 3-year warranty and supported by the Thermaltake worldwide customer service and technical support network.
20 Comments on Thermaltake Tower 100 Mini Chassis Now in Metallic Gold
Also, has the construction of the case improved since the initial release? I've read somewhere that the GPU is too close to the side panel for any air to move towards it, resulting in (potentially) overheating.
Hm, perhaps color naming might be down to there being a certain ... let's say stigma attached to the color orange growing over the past four-and-a-half years or so? And a parallel culture of emphatic denial of the existence of any orange color as well?