Corsair Carbide 678C review -
Product showcase – interior
As mentioned earlier, both side panels are easy to open: you can simply pull the left one away, and you have to remove two thumbscrews to release the right one. Let’s see what’s waiting inside.
The first thing in the main chamber that will catch your attention would be the four hard drive cages. They can be removed easily. The ODD tray is not a common sight these days.
You can install your SSDs/HDDs in the rear part of the chassis. There are three spaces for SSDs on each of the plastic cages. The 3.5"drive mounts are placed on the bottom-left side, in the PSU shroud compartment, and you can install up to two drives there.
Although it’s not a gigantic case, it’s easy to access all of the motherboard ports, and you can fit really huge components here. The case supports graphics cards up to 370mm in length, and we have yet to see anything even close to these limits in real life (even the MSI GeForce RTX 2080 Ti LIGHTNING Z edition is “only” 340mm long). CPU coolers can measure up to 170mm in height (which should be enough to fit most products on the market).
Corsair has announced an updated line of liquid coolers, and we have the Corsair H170i Elite Capellix XT edition on our test bench to see how the most beefy triple-fan 420mm model performs. The kit co...
Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5 6000 CL36 review
In July, Corsair presented a new series of DDR5 memories: the Vengeance RGB DDR5. The available kits from the RGB edition have a frequency higher than the base 4800 MHz (5200-6600 MHz); the non-RGB version starts from 4800 MHz. We are checking the Corsair Vengeance RGB 6000 MHz CL36 DDR5 kit today. It's in the middle frequency in the series. We already had an opportunity (almost three years ago) to review the Vengeance (Pro) RGB series RAM, but it was for the DDR4; the frequency was 3200 MHz, and it received a "Top Pick" award, and also the Vengeance RGB Pro SL which had 3600 MHz frequency (with CL18) and got the "Approved" award. But let's focus back on the tested DDR5 kit.
Corsair Katar Elite Wireless mouse review
In this article, we review the Corsair Katar Elite Wireless mouse. It’s an optical gaming mouse that was launched today, on 26.10.2022. The Katar model is a new version of the Katar Pro Wireless that was introduced on October 2020. The Katar Elite Wireless is targeted at gamers, but it should also work more than fine as a regular mouse. This time, the optical sensor is not the 10K DPI PMW3325 but a 26K DPI Corsair Marksman. It has 1 DPI resolutions steps, 650 IPS tracking, and up to 50G acceleration.
Corsair HS55 Wireless Core Headset review
Corsair has a broad range of PC components and peripherals. Among them, headsets are also available, and the range starts from the budget-oriented HS series (the reviewed one is one of them), then there’s the mid-range Void series, and it ends with high-end Virtuoso. Getting back to the HS series, it starts with HS35, and till now, it also contained HS45, HS50, HS55, HS60, HS65, HS70, HS75, and HS80 (some of them had different variants). We’re checking out the all-new Corsair HS55 Wireless Core in this review. Its debut is on the 20th of September, 2022.