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Ahhh! What a cool case

TruculentTucan

Senior member
hey guys.

while looking around on the internet I saw a couple of guys who had this case and I thought it was really cool. In fact, it seems (with a few blowholes) to be almost the perfect case. The only problem is its high price tag. Anyone have one they want to sell? or know of a place that sells them cheaper? The thing that pisses me off about it is that it shouldn't be sooo much more then some of those full towers.... it's just a cube!!!!!!

anyway, here is the link

tell me what you think
 
That Yeong Yang case is pretty sweet. Kinda tough to connect the hard drives and the devices with 18" cables since the case is so much longer than a normal tower. But if you have 24" you'll be set.
 
Check pricewatch...I don't remember exactly what the price was at Directron and I don't feel like looking it up, but pricewatch has some for something like $155 or so...

Good luck, it's a badass case,
nsx
 
Yeh, they are nice.

Not ATX 2.03 compliant (not a bigger deal i know)

I was looking at getting 2 for home as i like the look more than my Lian Li's
 
ATX 2.03

The most notable feature you'll notice on 850 motherboards and ATX 2.03 cases is four new screw holes near the new Socket 423 interface. These holes are used to help support the Pentium 4 heatsink. Since ATX cases don't have these holes, you'll either have to drill them yourself (which is a bit risky for most users) or upgrade to a new case that includes them

ATX 2.03 also calls for a new power supply specification, ATX12V. ATX12V power supplies add one new 4-pin 12V power connector for powering the CPU. ATX12V power supplies can be easily identified with this new connector -- if the power supply in question doesn't have the 4-pin connector, it's a regular ATX power supply. ATX 12V power supplies are backward compatible with ATX power supplies, so they should work fine in existing ATX motherboards. However ATX power supplies will not work with 850 motherboards that need the extra +12V power connector.
 
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