I bought one of these and it does look big.
I had to add a few accessories, such as a multi fan controller and a SSD enclosure taking one of the OD 5.25" bay.
I can tell you that I swore quite a few times as it is almost impossible to screw anything that is in the inside middle section! If you have big hands, just forget it!
I cannot understand Lian Li would have not thought about providing something a bit more convenient to put in screws. I personally like to have my accessories well tight, not wibbly-wobbling when touched because one side has no screw.
Also something I found annoying is that I cannot move my 5 to 3 hdd cage to this case because of the 5,25" support plates on each side. The cage I have is full with no cuts for these, so I cannot insert them. I miss 5 3.5" HDD in my final build... Just annoying as I really hoped I could fill it up. So now I have this $150 hdd cage with its fan sitting on a shelf doing nothing good.
These plates seems quite hard to bend, especially as there is not much room to access from the middle side section.
Another very annoying think are the screws on the top cover for the fans section. Why on Earth putting screws that are so hard to unscrew (not the usual screw type) that I had to bring a plier to pinch them and twist at least a bit so I can finish manually. Also I thought "great, I can pile other stuff on that top cover!"... Unfortunately, with these screws poking out, it is not possible to lay anything down flat on top of it. I thought my PFSense firewall and my Wireless router would fit nicely on top... big mistake.
Oh, and another thing I didn't like. If you remove the screws from the vertical sliding bar that locks the hard drives in place, and you want to screw them back, that bar is pushed away as it is not in an enclosed rail! You need to keep it pushed against the front, the screw holes in the right place, in order to screw these bolts back in!
I would also have loved the option to have both the wheel casters or some plain rubber feet. If one intend on putting this case on top of a desk sized filing cabinet, it is not great to have the wheels. Some rubber feet would have been best suited. They
Although it is all aluminum, I found this case very light. I thought it would be much heavier. My Lancool K58 model was much heavier, which is weird. Plastic is heavier than metal it seems
So the weight make this case feel wrongly cheap. Just a personal opinion.
Would I recommend this case to my friends? Maybe the ones I don't like much... Although it is generous with 20 drives and 5 usable external 5.25" bays, there are a lot of design flaws that are not making this the case of the century.
At AU$550 naked, plus all the fans needed (about 7 or 8), bringing the total at about AU$700, and if I lived in the USA, I would rather purchase a Caselabs case than this one.
Caselabs is way too expensive to be shipped to Australia unfortunately. It will definitely my next choice once this one is filled with all backups, movies, musics and other digital contents we accumulate over time.
In this situation, I might have been better off buying a Norco RPC-4224 with 24 3.5" hot swap bays! It would be another AU$300 to add the hot swap backplanes on the Lian Li PC-D8000 case for the 20 hdds!