Enermax offers you the full monty with their giant new enclosure
Subject: Cases and Cooling | April 18, 2012 - 05:06 PM | Jeremy Hellstrom
Tagged: enermax, fulmogt jumbo, htpx
At 674 x 235 x 640mm (26.5" x 9.2" x 25.2") the Enermax FulmoGT Jumbo can handle even HPTX motherboards and would be a perfect for a dual CPU, multiple GPU system build since you will have no troubles fitting the system in the case. You even have enough space to fit in a secondary PSU without taking up so much space you couldn't fit a full watercooling system inside if the 18cm and 23cm fans are not to your liking. [H]ard|OCP would have liked to see more solid materials used in some of the sides of the case but overall they were very impressed with the cooling capabilities of the case.
"Big, bigger, biggest. Enermax pulls out all the stops with one of the largest "desktop" computer cases on the market today. If expansion room, oversized HPTX motherboards, and plenty of cooling options are on your list of needs when it comes to a chassis, The FulmoGT may just fit the bill."
Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- Fractal Design Core 1000: How Little is Too Little @ AnandTech
- NZXT Switch 810 Hybrid Full-Tower Case Review @ Hi Tech Legion
- Silverstone Precision PS07B Micro-ATX Case @ Kitguru
- Lian Li PC-100 Case Review @ Rbmods
- Fractal Design Define Mini Mini-Tower Chassis Tweaktown
- XigmaTek GIGAS chassis @ Guru of 3D
- Corsair 300R Case Review @ OCC
- Cooler Master Cosmos II Ultra Tower Case Review @Hi Tech Legion
- Corsair Carbide Series 300R Mid-Tower Case @ Tweaktown
- Thermaltake Bigwater 760 Plus Review @ OCC
- Swiftech H20-320 Edge HD Liquid Cooling Kit @ Bjorn3D
- NZXT 120mm and 140mm FZ Airflow Fan Series Review @ Hi Tech Legion
- Reeven Six Eyes Fan Controller @ Pro-Clockers
- NZXT Havik 120 Heatsink @ Frostytech
- D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers: Xigmatek Prime vs. Three Thermalright Coolers @ X-bit Labs
- Noctua NH-L12 CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Reeven Kelveros CPU Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
- Titan Fenrir Siberia @ Frostytech
- Be Quiet! Dark Rock Pro C1 Dual Tower CPU Cooler Review @ eTeknix
- NZXT Havik 120 CPU Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
- Noctua NH-L12 Low Profile CPU Cooler @ Funky Kit
- Cooler Master TPC 812 Performance Cooler Review @ Ninjalane
- Phanteks PH-TC14CS CPU Cooler @ Metku.net
- Phanteks PH-TC14PE CPU Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
- octua NH-L12 Low-Profile CPU Cooler Review @ NikKTech
When you need big, think big. The Cubitek HPTX-Tank can handle the biggest systems.
Subject: Cases and Cooling | May 10, 2011 - 03:51 PM | Jeremy Hellstrom
Tagged: htpx, eatx, enclosure, cubitek, tank
The aptly named Cubitek HPTX-Tank is a whopping 230 x 600 x 610mm (9" x 23.6" x 24") and is specifically designed to hold the largest of system components, such as HPTX, EATX and CEB form factor motherboards. You could put an mATX board in the case and probably house a small child in the spare area if you so desired. It is about half the price of other large sized cases, such as the Lian Li PC-V2120 which will run you about $400 which leaves more budget for your oversized components. Take a look over at TechPowerUp.
Yes that is a DVD at the bottom.
"Cubitek joins the ranks of Lian Li and Xigmatek with their HPTX-Tank chassis, which is one of three cases on the market capable of holding huge motherboards like the EVGA SR-2. With an unbelievable price tag for an Aluminum chassis, we take a close look to see if it manages to redefine the price / performance segment for such enclosures."
Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- IN-WIN BUC: Just How Much $100 Can Buy @ AnandTech
- Cooler Master Elite 371 Computer Case @ Benchmark Reviews
- SilverStone FT03 Micro ATX Chassis Review @ OCIA
- Corsair Obsidian 650D System Enclosure @ Metku.net
- IN WIN BUC Mid Tower Chassis @ Tweaktown
- Akasa Raptor White Chassis Review @ eTeknix
- Thermaltake Armor A60 System Enclosure @ Metku.net
- Azza Toledo 301 Budget Gaming Tower @ Pro-Clockers
- Deepcool Z5 Thermal Compound @ Overclockers Online
- Lamptron FC8 Fan Controller Review @ Techgage
- BitFenix Shinobi Chassis Review @ eTeknix
- Evercool Transformer 3 CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Zalman CNPS11X Extreme CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Noctua NH-C14 CPU Cooler Review @ t-break
- Scythe Mine 2 CPU @ iXBT Labs

