Corsair Obsidian 750D review

PC Cases and Modding 227 Page 9 of 10 Published by

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Now, I used some production photos from Corsair as I suck at building PCs that look great 'n cool.

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Here's a very nice example with all kinds of liquid cooling installed. Below, you can see what happens if you remove the side panel and install fans or say liquid cooling. Keep your colors two tone, black and something else and dang, you can create a setup like that. That is a serious setup right there. The Obsidian Series 750D offers enough space to include up to a 360mm radiator on the roof of the case, and a 140mm radiator in the rear exhaust fan mounting area.

 

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 All-in-one-coolers such as the Hydro Series H55, H60, H80i, H100i, H90 and H110 are fully supported. When mounting a full-length radiator on the roof of the case, the upper 5.25 inch optical drive bay will be partially blocked by the radiator. When mounting a radiator in the front of the case, the HDD trays may need to be relocated or removed.

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The 750D comes with 6 tool-free HDD caddies that support both 3.5 and 2.5 inch drives without the need for an adapter.There are also four standalone tool-free 2.5 inch drive bays on the rear side of the case which will support SSDs or other 2.5 inch drives. Two modular HDD cages give you many configuration options for fans, radiators and other accessories.


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The CPU backplate cutout makes it simple to install an aftermarket CPU cooler without needing to remove the motherboard. The rear of the motherboard tray also has plenty of cable tie-down loops, which makes it simple to keep the cables routed to the rear-side of the motherboard tray neat and tidy. The side-panel gap has also been specially designed to accommodate the additional space required to store all the cables.

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