Sunday, June 26th 2022

Thermaltake Announces the Divider 370 and 170 TG ARGB Chassis

Thermaltake, the leading PC DIY premium brand for Case, Cooling, Gaming peripherals and enthusiast memory solutions, is pleased to announce the Divider 370 TG ARGB Mid Tower Chassis and Divider 170 TG ARGB Micro Chassis, adding new members to the Divider Series. The new models emphasize on the ultimate airflow performance with a large airflow-optimized mesh front panel and the pre-installed ARGB PMW fans to offer better heat dissipation. The Divider 370 and 170 also maintain the excellent features of Divider series, the modern design with the unique panel that comprised a steel panel and a 3 mm scratch resistant tempered glass window on the left side, offers a visually divided look while offering a great view of interior. Divider 170 and Divider 370 are now be available in black and white.

Divider 370 and 170 are the next-gen gaming PC case, the ample interior space to support hardware and cooling solution can satisfy the demands of gaming enthusiasts. The Divider 370 has a room for E-ATX motherboard (12"x13") and up to a 360 mm radiator at the front and top, it also comes with three preinstalled three hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans which can effectively lower the operation noise and enhance the thermal efficiency with excellent reliability. The distinguished ARGB PWM fan is designed to synchronize with ASUS Aura Sync, GIGABYTE RGB Fusion, MSI Mystic Light Sync, and ASRock Polychrome. It supports motherboards with a 5 V addressable RGB header, allowing you to control the lights directly from the software mentioned above without installing any extra lighting software or controllers. For Divider 170, it can support up to a Micro ATX motherboard and a 280 mm radiator at the front. Besides, the brilliant built-in two hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans allow the system to achieve better cooling performance.
What's more, full length built-in PSU cover of Divider 170 and Divider 370 helps the users maintain clean and organized cable management and not to obstructing the air flow in the case, it is designed to provide sufficient space to hide the unsightly cables and let your flawless setup to take the center stage. In addition for Divider 370, the pre-installed GPU holder enables vertical GPU installation and prevents graphics card from sagging.

With the stylish unique appearance, user-friendly functions, ultimate cooling solution, and upgradable system, Divider 170 TG ARGB Micro Chassis and Divider 370 TG ARGB Mid Tower Chassis allow you to build your epic build in sleek and sturdy way.

Features of the Thermaltake Divider 370 TG ARGB Mid Tower Chassis:
Unique Side Panels Design with a Tempered Glass Window
The exceptional feature of the Divider 370 TG ARGB is that the unique panel that comprised of a steel panel and a 3 mm tempered glass window on the left side. The side panel is visually divided to create a unique look, and it is tool-free and easy to remove. Tempered glass window is thicker and more scratch-resistant compared to standard acrylic.

Mesh Front Panel
The Divider 370 TG ARGB comes with a large airflow-optimized stylish mesh panel at the front, offering a unique divided design and additional air intake through the mesh.

Three Preinstalled ARGB PWM Fans
The Divider 370 TG ARGB comes with three pre-installed hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans which can effectively lower the operation noise and enhance thermal efficiency. The fans' lighting effect can be either controlled by the physical RGB button on the I/O panel or motherboard software from ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI, and ASRock. There are 27 RGB lighting modes to play around with when using the physical RGB button, and it's simple to switch between physical button control and motherboard software control by long pressing the RGB button for three seconds.

PSU Cover & Pre-Installed Vertical GPU Holder
The built-in PSU cover is designed to hide unsightly cables with overall good ventilation. The pre-installed GPU holder enables vertical GPU installation, but also helps reduce the weight on the PCI-E slots.

Excellent Dust Filtration
The Divider 370 TG ARGB has a well-designed removable magnetic fan filter on the top and the inner right side. At the base, the removable filter provides excellent dust protection and dirt reduction, ensuring a dust-free environment.

Air Intake and Exhaust
The cooling performance of the Divider 370 TG ARGB is excellent. The large airflow-optimized mesh panel at the front allow optimal air intake. Cooling exhausts are located at the rear of the case. On the top and right side, there are venting mechanisms for air intake or exhaust depends on the user's overall PC layout design.

Excellent Hardware Support & Cooling Solution
The Divider 370 TG ARGB has great hardware support. It can support a CPU cooler with a maximum height of 170 mm, VGA with maximum length of 400 mm (without radiator), a power supply with a length of up to 230 mm (with HDD Cage), two 3.5" HDDs with two 2.5" SSDs or a total of four 2.5" SSDs. When it comes to cooling, the Divider 370 TG ARGB comes preinstalled with three hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans which can effectively lower the operation noise and enhance the thermal efficiency, you can also choose to put three 140 mm fans at the front and one 120 mm fan at the rear. Moreover, it can hold up to three 120 mm fans at the top, two 120 mm fans on the right of the motherboard side. For radiator compatibility, it can support up to 360 mm at the front and top.

Handy I/O Ports
Two USB 3.0 and one HD Audio jack is placed on the top panel to grant direct access when needed.

Sync with Motherboard RGB Software
Designed to synchronize with ASUS Aura Sync, GIGABYTE RGB Fusion, MSI Mystic Light Sync, and ASRock Polychrome. It supports motherboards with a 5 V addressable RGB header, allowing you to control the lights directly from the software mentioned above without installing any extra lighting software or controllers. For more details, please visit ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI, and ASRock official websites.

Features of the Thermaltake Divider 170 TG ARGB Micro Chassis:
Unique Side Panel Design with a Tempered Glass Window
The exceptional feature of the Divider 170 TG ARGB is that the unique panel that comprised of a steel panel and a 3 mm tempered glass window on the left side. The side panel is visually divided to create a unique look, and it is tool-free and easy to remove. Tempered glass window is thicker and more scratch-resistant compared to standard acrylic.

Mesh Front Panel
The Divider 170 TG ARGB comes with a large airflow-optimized stylish mesh panel at the front, offering a unique divided design and additional air intake through the mesh.

Two Preinstalled ARGB PWM Fans
The Divider 170 TG ARGB comes with two pre-installed hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans which can effectively lower the operation noise and enhance thermal efficiency. The fans' lighting can be either controlled by the physical RGB button on the I/O panel or motherboard software from ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI, and ASRock. There are 27 RGB lighting modes to play around with when using the physical RGB button, and it's simple to switch between physical button control and motherboard software control by long pressing the RGB button for three seconds.

Built-in PSU Cover
Divider 170 TG ARGB comes with a full length power supply cover providing plenty of space to tuck away cables, while keeping airflow clear for your hard drives and PSU.

Excellent Dust Filtration
The Divider 170 TG ARGB has a handy magnetic fan filter on the top and the inner left side which simply attaches for easy dust filtration and particulate protection. At the base of the chassis, additional filter provides excellent protection against both dirt and dust.

Air Intake and Exhaust
The cooling performance of the Divider 170 TG ARGB is excellent. The large airflow-optimized mesh panel at the front allows optimal air intake. Cooling exhausts are located at the rear of the case.

Excellent Hardware Support & Cooling Solution
The Divider 170 TG ARGB has great hardware support. It can support a CPU cooler with a maximum height of 160 mm, VGA with maximum length of 350 mm (without radiator), a power supply with a length of up to 200 mm (with HDD Cage), two 3.5" HDDs with two 2.5" SSDs or a total of four 2.5" SSDs. When it comes to cooling, the Divider 170 TG ARGB comes preinstalled with two hydraulic bearing 120 mm ARGB PWM fans which can effectively lower the operation noise and enhance thermal efficiency, you can also choose to put two 140 mm fans at the front and one 120 mm fan at the rear. Moreover, it can hold up to two 140 mm fans at the top. For radiator compatibility, it can support up to a 280 mm at the front.

Handy I/O Ports
Two USB 3.0, one USB 2.0, and one HD Audio are placed on the top panel to grant direct access when needed.

For more information, visit the product pages of the Divider 370 TG ARGB, Divider 370 TG Snow ARGB, Divider 170 ARGB, and Divider 170 TG Snow ARGB.
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13 Comments on Thermaltake Announces the Divider 370 and 170 TG ARGB Chassis

#1
Chaitanya
Nice to see Thermaltake getting over their obsession with solid front panels.
Posted on Reply
#2
AsRock
TPU addict
ChaitanyaNice to see Thermaltake getting over their obsession with solid front panels.
Not cured by the looks of it, they should of perforated the lower part too and gave the option of a 3rd or at least lower fan.
Posted on Reply
#3
MentalAcetylide
AsRockNot cured by the looks of it, they should of perforated the lower part too and gave the option of a 3rd or at least lower fan.
That's the problem with a lot of these cases with solid front panels, depending on what kind of hardware you intend to install. My case has a solid front panel, but it has 3 sets of 3 fans each on the top(exhaust)+bottom(intake)+ on the inner side(intake) + 1 rear(exhaust), which imo is one of the better designs if you want both the front & side panel to be solid/glass. While its not the most ideal for thermals depending on the orientation of the motherboard, in my situation with the installed hardware, its much better than anything I've seen so far from Thermaltake. For solid front chassis, you're better off with something like a Lian Li o11 Dynamic where the PSU sits in the side of the case rather than housed in the bottom. Granted, the case will need to be a bit wider, but at least the airflow will be much better going in & out of the case compared to what we have here.
Posted on Reply
#4
bonehead123
btarunrDivider 370 and 170 are the next-gen gaming PC case
HAHAHAHAHAHA....ROTFLMAO @this :D

1) No C - No Buy - NO excuses... but instead we get USB 2 & 3 A ports.....hello TT, this is 1998 calling & we want all our outdated, antique ports back, like, yesterday :D

2) Same-ole-same-same-lame-lame-no-design-effort-whatsoever rectangular boxen of yesteryear... hello TT, this is 1998 calling & we want some new, innovative, and unique case designs already, like, back when you made the TT900/500/100 towers and the level series :D
Posted on Reply
#5
BlaezaLite
Does look nice but anyone who knows anything about computers isn't going to buy this with a chunk of no airflow at the front that could of been perforated and had an extra fan at the bottom. Nope.
Posted on Reply
#6
MentalAcetylide
bonehead123HAHAHAHAHAHA....ROTFLMAO @this :D

1) No C - No Buy - NO excuses... but instead we get USB 2 & 3 A ports.....hello TT, this is 1998 calling & we want all our outdated, antique ports back, like, yesterday :D

2) Same-ole-same-same-lame-lame-no-design-effort-whatsoever rectangular boxen of yesteryear... hello TT, this is 1998 calling & we want some new, innovative, and unique case designs already, like, back when you made the TT900/500/100 towers and the level series :D
I understand maybe about the ports, but there's really not much else that can be done in regards to the overall shape without making the case extremely expensive and out of monetary reach of most buyers. Something I would do, for example is make the overall shape of the case that is the equivalent of a few dodecahedrons combined together in such a way so that it supports various radiator sizes. Only issue I see with that is it would end up being a much bigger case.
Posted on Reply
#7
bonehead123
MentalAcetylidemake the overall shape of the case that is the equivalent of a few dodecahedrons
If I wanted something along those lines, I would just buy one of the many prehistoric-transformers-abortion-gone-bad cases that are already available :D No thanks !
Posted on Reply
#8
MentalAcetylide
bonehead123If I wanted something along those lines, I would just buy one of the many prehistoric-transformers-abortion-gone-bad cases that are already available :D No thanks !
Any examples? I think the cases you're talking about are more about the shape alone rather than actually serving any kind of functionality advantages.
Posted on Reply
#9
Chaitanya
AsRockNot cured by the looks of it, they should of perforated the lower part too and gave the option of a 3rd or at least lower fan.
true, that would have allowed use of 360mm Rad even on small m-ATX case. Still this is a good step forward compared to their previous Divider series of cases which mostly had solid panels.
Posted on Reply
#10
trsttte
MentalAcetylidebut there's really not much else that can be done in regards to the overall shape without making the case extremely expensive and out of monetary reach of most buyers
Not really true, i'm not saying it's easy to make a rectangular box stand out on a sea of endless permutations on rectangular boxes but Fractal was able to, Lian-Li was also able to with their O11 design they been milking for a couple years now, many others as well. Thermaltake could too if they wanted
Posted on Reply
#11
claes
They do they are just poorly designed, like the tower series. Their open air cases aren’t bad though.
Posted on Reply
#12
amarthar
I'm just happy that someone remembers that MicroATX cases are a thing.
Posted on Reply
#13
MentalAcetylide
trsttteNot really true, i'm not saying it's easy to make a rectangular box stand out on a sea of endless permutations on rectangular boxes but Fractal was able to, Lian-Li was also able to with their O11 design they been milking for a couple years now, many others as well. Thermaltake could too if they wanted
The o11 that you mentioned is probably more of a niche product. Trust me, it is big, and a bit more heavier than your average case; especially with two 360mm radiators installed with the rest of the hardware. Not many people who are not DIY-inclined(including myself), want such a big case unless they absolutely need the room for things such as bigger PSU, multiple radiators, custom water cooling, etc.
Posted on Reply
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