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Fractal Design Pop Air RGB Black - Tempered Glass Clear Tint - Honeycomb Mesh Front – TG side panel - Three 120 mm Aspect 12 RGB fans included – ATX High Airflow Mid Tower PC Gaming Case

£9.9£99Clearance
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While our temps were warm, we used a single-tower cooler and an Intel i7 in Aida 64, so our hardware and the stress test isn’t too practical for a silent case. COMES WITH 3X ASPECT 12 RGB FANS PRE-INSTALLED – Your PC will stay cool with Fractal’s Pop Mini case designs, as it features a unique hexagonally patterned mesh front, which creates a striking visual effect.

The next time we visit CES or Computex we fully intend to meet up with Fractal Design and interrogate them about sales of the various coloured options of the new Pop cases. While the painted finish is a fairly trivial matter, however it makes the ATX Pop Air stand out from the competition and that is a neat trick when you consider just how many PC cases there are on the market. It’s certainly worth considering if you want to keep your fan noise and coil whine contained while you game or work. Delivered with its non-vented top panel as the default option, the Seta Q1 shows us what happens to temperatures at the top of the motherboard when airflow is reduced at the top of the case. Fractal Design’s Pop XL Silent isn’t nearly silent, but its noise levels undercut most non-quieted rivals.Fractal Design includes an optional non-vented panel to replace the top panel dust filter, but using it would have required us to relocate our AIO CPU cooler to the front panel, and that probably would have meant removing two of the included fans and using our cooler’s fans in their place. Larger cases that hold more components usually cost more to produce (more materials required); well-ventilated cases usually add the expense of fans; and quieter cases often need additional material to dampen vibration.

The Pop XL Silent’s bottom features a power-supply dust filter that pulls out from the rear, via a grab tab that protrudes about half an inch from the rear panel. SilverStone’s similarly quieted Seta Q1 sits opposite the Pop XL Silent in today’s charts, with the four quietest of recently reviewed “non-silent” cases separating them at least in the legend. The Pop Silent offers asound-damped build in excellent quality, giving all users plenty ofoptions and room to maneuver. Another piece is attached to the inside of the right side panel on our case, and those who choose a steel panel for the left side of the case get another sheet there, as well. But this review will focus on the Pop Silent, which only comes in black or white, with no RGBs–a somewhat odd decision for a case line that seems to emphasize a pop of color as part of its name.Often used for the mundane task of holding a port breakout plate, the extra slot also provides die-hard users the ability to install a double-slot card at the bottom of a motherboard, if desired. Fractal fuse flair with function in the new Pop series of cases that does not skimp on aesthetics or flexibility. A stepped-in area in the front access hole allows easier cable passage, but limits motherboard depth to around 11 inches.

Available with some nifty hints of color, Fractal Design’s Pop Air RGB is suitable for seekers of a big PC case with a pair of hidden, old-school 5. Since space is very tight around the top panel’s 140mm fan mounts, Fractal Design recommends using nothing larger than a dual-120mm (aka 240mm) radiator here. inch drive bays – there’s nothing like popping that Blu-Ray disk tray open and watching an HD without the compression artifacts than can come from streaming. The display of third-party trademarks and trade names on this site does not necessarily indicate any affiliation or the endorsement of PCMag. Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page.Their main product areas are Computer Cases, Power Supplies and Water Cooling units amongst other related accessories. In a move that appears a nod toward the reintroduction of bay-panel devices, the Pop Air RGB hides dual 5. Fractal Design still rates the Pop Air RGB as supporting a mere 170mm power-supply depth, which seems conservative given our far-more-generous measurement of 240mm. Tom's Hardware is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher.

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