KenandKarin
Really nice case. It has a lot of features and works very well. Its strong enough, I don't see why people complain about it being made of thin metal. For no reason have I ever had the need to test how much weight my computer case would hold. I mounted an ATX motherboard and had to problems with stripped holes, etc. My cooler stands pretty tall and there was plenty of room to close the side panel.Tool less hard drive caddies work well and are easy to use. Had to use mounting screws on my SSD, but the main drives didn't need screws. Plenty of room to hide wires and run cables.The included fan moves plenty of air and while it is not silent, its not noisy either. I added two more fans to the top and they all pull air through the front and out the back/top. No issues with cooling.The little plastic cover for the rear PCI slot opening that cover the screws is pretty flimsy and cheap, but since it doesn't affect anything about the performance of the case, its not a problem.Its an inexpensive case that is not cheap, and it has plenty of features for the price.
DaveInAZ
I bought the Thermaltake Versa H22 SPCC ATX Mid Tower Computer Chassis CA-1B3-00M1NN-00. That's the black one with no windows, since Amazon keeps mixing together reviews of different products.Simply put, this is the best case I've ever used, and I include OEM cases in that. This case is not as rugged as some I've had that probably would have survived being dropped of a cliff, but who cares? I'm not planning on doing that. Is the metal thin? Yes, so it's lightweight. Does it hurt anything? No, not if you're not kicking it or tossing in your car's trunk. And it's less than half the weight of the case the last Dell I bought came with, umm.... 15 years ago?The rest of the design is awesome. Both sides remove, so you can manage the wires on the back side. It has cages for every drive you're likely to have. It has lots of places to put fans, which is good, because my build tended to overheat until I added three more 120mm fans, two in front, one on top. Very, very easy.And for the dingbats complaining that there's not enough room for the cable connections on the hard drives, YOU'RE DOING IT WRONG! Mount them THE OTHER WAY, and the problem is solved. There's a reason you can open both sides, you muppets.
dinub1dinub1
I got my case today. Of course I was eager to install the PC components into it and use it.1st the top grilled net is designed to accept one fan or more, or even a water cooling system. Please see picture attached. It has holes for attaching screws. Neat. It came with a dust filter on bottom, and all necessary hardware. I love it. it is strong and very functional. I love this case.I am using an AMD 6 core CPU with a Cooler Master 212 EVO. attached. Tge case provides enough clearance for such cooler, though it's close.After installing motherboard and components, it booted, but it gave me a "USB over current exceeded" error.. PC would shut down in 15 sec.I removed the motherboard from the case and all works fine. I need to see what that error is. It may be a short with the case. The motherboard was attached directly to dimpled posts on the back of the case. Maybe I need to install the regular hexagonal brass studs. This can be fixed. Overall I think this is an excellent, very functional PC case, given it's low price and quality.I have found the issue with the USB over current warning.. The dimpled studs behind are not perfect, and they were shorting. I added brass stands... this brought the motherboard slightly higher, but problem was solved. No more error.I may need to add insulating washers between the motherboard and the dimpled posts behind, but not now.I even succeeded to close the side panel with Coller Master 212, up to the top :) All good now.Update: I removed the hexagonal studs, but added mate cello-tape (insulator) on top of the dimpled studs, and reinstalled the motherboard. Upon boot, all looks and reads normally. No errors of any kind. So problem was solved. It was the built in dimpled attaching studs, that are not perfect.
James Hewitt II
Welp, computer build number 2 is happening and this is the case i decided to go with. Its like a tiny version of my beast gaming rig which is an Eatx V71 case.I'm using this case for a Streaming PC build so it will mainly be processing power with a low end GPU GTX750. I stream with my current rig just fine, but some games i play and attempt to stream utilize about the same amount of processing power as my OBS does, which doesn't work out to well. So i decided to stream with a separate computer. I am keeping the build pretty simple, mainly focusing on CPU and RAM.GPU - GTX 750 2gCPU - AMD FX 8-Core Black Edition FX-8350Ram - 16GB RAM Memory (oftek)As you can see, im building a pretty cheap rig, probably going to come to around 500-600$ at the most. Not including the last piece i need which is an elgato capture card. I will be getting that next week and it will be complete.The case is great, already have most everything wired up and ready to go!