Internal Design

Inside, the Gaming Bomb II Chenbro has served up a full plate of features. Chenbro has employed a wide variety of tool-less features, most of which are new to us. These include drive locking systems, which are the first of their kind that we have seen.




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To secure 5-1/4" drives, we first turned the knobs 180o counter-clockwise, inserted the drives in the bays and turned the knobs back 180o clockwise to lock them in place.




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The 3-1/2" external drive bay mounts were designed slightly different. We first have to open the locks by pulling the lever out from left to right, and then back to the left to snap it back in place once the drives are inserted.




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Another drive bay feature that we noticed was Chenbro's FlexiBayTM technology. The Xpider II employed a removable drive cage, which positioned HDDs with power and data connections facing the back of the case. The GB2 has updated this cage to allow users to reposition the cage so that the drive bays can be mounted to have their power/data cable connections face to the left or right side of the chassis as well as back towards the motherboard. A potential downside to the cage is the lack of the tool-less design that the upper drive bays have. The HDD cage uses screws, which are conveniently supplied down the side of the cage, to mount HDDs.

External Design (cont'd) Internal Design (cont'd)
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  • hoppa - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    does anyone else think its unfair and incredibly biased (and unjournalistic) that they dont make a single mention of the noise this thing puts out in the conclusion? come on! this thing is on par with the noisiest case they've ever reviewed and they do all they can to skirt the issue. this thing is as loud as a f*in lawnmower! BS, if you ask me.
  • Jackular - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    Good to see that the case fans are with the 3-pin connectors (I got Zalman's fanmate and multi-connector to get the fans into different volts). It's loud as default (with 12V) but how "loud" are they at 5V or 7V? This is something I would really like to know about.
  • ViRGE - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    Looking at the case, for the price given, there's 1 critical flaw that really hurts it: the placement of the front Aux ports. Aux ports are only useful if you can reach them, and the bottom of the case is next in the line of unreachable spots just head of the rear of the case. If I'm buying a high-end case, the Aux ports MUST be at least mid-way on the case if not ideally at the top.
  • Noli - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    The question on value is simple - $240 for the (near equal) noisiest case Anandtech has review is crap value plain and simple. This then begs the questions others asked about the fans. It seems very strange that 2x 120mm fans should be so loud so does replacing them with decent alternatives (panaflo etc) put it on par with an Antec with 2x 120mm in terms of noise? I'd hope with such a discrepancy that a little bit more journalistic investigation would have come naturally - if I spend $240 I want to know if replacing the fans is a solution or if there is an inherent flaw in the design. Apologies for rant.
  • Wolfz - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    What is the heat performance like with the third fan installed?

    Would switching the fans to (better/quieter?) ones reduce the sound significantly?

    Are they suppose to be stuck at 3200 rpm's, I thought it was standard to have variable speed fans running inside the system. Is there any sort of mod you can do to handle that?
  • bldckstark - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    I think the different length stand-offs were for different sized boards. The 1/3" are for universal locations, and the 1/8" with the add-on part are for customizable locations for different board sizes. That seems reasonable to me, and not a negative. Also, thanks for finally agreeing that a removable MB tray is not such a great feature. I got tired of seeing cases ripped for something that even most enthusiasts don't use. Now, about testing cases with their own PS's. Do them with the stock PS, and with your own so I know if I need to buy a new PS with the case or not. Better yet, benchmark the PS if it is a part of the sale just like you would any other part of the case it comes with.
    Good review by the way. Keep up the good work, and remember you can't please everybody, so try to please me instead.
  • Avalon - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    I was really starting to like the case until I read the price. I was expecting half of that, at the most. Jesus.
  • TinyTeeth - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    Interesting. But damn, a Coolermaster Wavemaster with 120mm fans would be perfect!
  • LoneWolf15 - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    In response to #6, I agree on the dodge about whether this case is worth our money. I also agree with #8, finally a review of a case that isn't a downright tacky pre-mod.

    I had wanted this case at one point and waited several months. However, I had extremely poor communications response from Chenbro, who ignored two of my three e-mails, and never gave me the information I needed on pricing and availability. I ended up buying an Antec P160 with the window, and modding a custom 120mm blowhole on top, a feature that I wanted that the Chenbro has. I'm glad I bought the Antec; $240 even for a case as nice as the Chenbro is ridiculous. I paid half that for the Antec, which is a topnotch design, and used the money I saved to do things like sleeve the power supply and rebuild the system.

    One more thing: The review was very well done on the case itself. My compliments, it's one of the better reviews I've seen here in a long time.
  • Aquila76 - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - link

    $240?!? This isn't a server case, it's a gaming case. I'd rather blow the 240 on a video card or a 500GB RAID 0 SATA array. Maybe they should call it the Chenbro Duesenberg!

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