Thermaltake AH T200 Review - A Smaller Attack Helicopter 13

Thermaltake AH T200 Review - A Smaller Attack Helicopter

A Closer Look - Inside »

A Closer Look - Outside


Thermaltake has done an excellent job of retaining all the design details from the original and placing them on the mATX AH T200. You still get the same three cockpit window panes, those signature air vents, and the stub nose we have seen on the AH T600. Thus, this more compact variant still clearly reminds us of an attack helicopter.


Looking at the front, you can clearly see through the front window, all the way to the back of the chassis. Should you install any fans in this area of the chassis, the top one will be visible. You may install either two 120 or 140 mm units or even place a radiator of up to 280 mm here. There is not much to see in the rear. Since the AH T200 is an open-air chassis, there is no rear panel.


Both sides of the AH T200 come with a nifty looking, thick glass panel that is held in place by a big thumb screw. These side panels are hinged onto the frame of the case, which means you can swing them open and remove them completely to simplify system assembly.


In the top is once again an air vent that covers mounting holes for two 120 or 140 mm fans. You may access this area by removing four thumb screws holding the top panel in place. The IO consists of two USB 3.0, the usual audio plugs, and a USB 3.1 Gen2 Type-C plug.


In the rear, over sixty percent of the upper half is for the motherboard with five expansion slots—you will never run out of space, even when filling all slots of your mATX board. Below that is a PSU mounting bracket you may remove for easier assembly, which should come in handy in switching parts out with your system fully assembled.
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Jul 24th, 2024 13:31 EDT change timezone

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