Benchmark Comparisons
To get as meaningful a comparison as possible between the three cases we installed the same set of hardware into each one: our standard ATX test bed. Each system used the default fan configuration the case came with, which meant two 120mm fans running at 12V in each case. The ambient air temperature during all tests was kept at a steady 23.5 degrees Celsius.

ATX Test Bed
DFI LanParty UT 915P-T12
Pentium 4 530 Prescott 3.0ghz
OCZ 512MB DDR2 x 2
Zalman CNPS 9500 Heatsink
Seagate 120gb SATA Hard Drive
Chaintech GeForce 6600GT
Zalman VF-700 Cu GPU Cooler
MSI DVD-CD/R/RW Combo drive
Zalman ZM460-APS PSU

With similar overall designs and the same number and placement of fans in each case, we didn't expect to see much difference in cooling performance between the three units. However, taking a look at the component temperatures chart below showed us that we needed to look a little closer at what each case was doing thermally.


No doubt the reason the Eureka was getting such low CPU and GPU temperatures was its large ventilated area on the side panel directly above these components. This decision is interesting for a case designed more for sever use though, considering it sacrifices airflow over the hard drives, which shows up as considerably higher temperatures for our system hard drive and MOSFETs.

Between the Eclipse and the Aguila, things are much closer. Without ventilation on the sides they pull the majority of the air through the front, resulting in much lower hard drive temperatures - especially under load. Both cases keep generally good temperatures across the board, but the Aguila's ability to stifle drastic heat changes from idle to load certainly deserves merit.

The temperature benchmarking results are interesting at the most, but the noise level testing was downright shocking for the three cases.


Even with only two large fans, the Eureka case came in registering a full 42 dB-A on our sound meter. This surprised us, because subjectively, we really felt the Eclipse was just as noisy. It seemed that the rear fan in both cases could benefit form a fan controller reducing its voltage to 10 or 9 volts - at the stock 12 V setting there was a very noticeable hum from the Eclipse and the sound of moving air from the Eureka.

Coming out of this arena the Aguila was a clear champion. With competitive temperatures and a very pleasant lack of annoying whines, the Aguila's fans were definitely tuned and placed the best for good performance without annoying sound levels.

Thermaltake Aguila – Installation Final Words
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  • Griswold - Thursday, August 17, 2006 - link

    The first one looks like some vertical hi-fi deck with a side window - and I hate side windows.

    Yuck indeed.
  • seven9sn10s - Thursday, August 17, 2006 - link

    The Aguila has a measurement of 27dB(12" above) and subjective rating of 2/10.
    In a previous review, the Raidmax X1 & Antec P150 both a measurement of 45dB(12" above) & subjective rating of 2/10 & 2.5/10 respectively. The subject ratings to dB measurements do not seem to be on a consistent scale. Am I to believe that the Aguila is so much quieter than the Raidmax X1 or Antec P150?? Please clear this up. Thanks.
  • seven9sn10s - Friday, August 18, 2006 - link

    Hello???
    Somebody please answer.. is this Aguila case far quieter than the Antec P150/Solo? Tryin to build a system here. Thanks.
  • poopoohead - Sunday, August 20, 2006 - link

    yeah, me too! the measurement seems so low compared to any other case they have ever tested, even the Zalman HTPC that they said was very quiet? why does the article not make special mention of the aguila super quietness?
  • Gholam - Thursday, August 17, 2006 - link

    HEC 6A rebadge, Chieftec DX rebadge... pay once for the case, and twice more for a TT sticker. No thanks.
  • Missing Ghost - Wednesday, August 16, 2006 - link

    The Aguila with no window does not exist?! I thinks
  • tthiel - Wednesday, August 16, 2006 - link

    "There's a law on AnandTech case reviews: no matter what they might review, a bunch of people have to show up and grouse about how the cases look like crap, or they're nice looking but too expensive, or some other opinion followed by the statement that "no one would ever buy these...."

    So what your saying is people have different opinions...thats very insightful.
  • teng029 - Wednesday, August 16, 2006 - link

    i like this case, although removable motherboard trays should be standard on cases these days.
  • tthiel - Wednesday, August 16, 2006 - link

    Those are some seriously ugly cases.
  • eastvillager - Wednesday, August 16, 2006 - link

    All bling, no zing.

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