Comparing the drive bay covers from the PS08 and the old AOpen case shows that Silverstone used taller reinforcing ridges on their sides, so the rigidity is quite deliberate:
- Drive bay cover comparison.jpg (90.04 KiB) Viewed 24657 times
I did find their mechanism for "tool-less" removal rather clumsy, however (and what's the big advantage when the case still requires screws to mount the drives?).
The front fan is a 120mm Honghua sleeve bearing unit labelled at 1200RPM (which was confirmed by using SpeedFan to monitor the tacho output) and with a 9-blade design a bit like NMB's 4710KL (which, compared to competing 7-blade designs, provides higher airflow but at lower pressure). Examining the bearing showed a bit of grease — which is not good, although you may get away with it if you use temperature control. The intake air filter is one of those plastic-mesh designs that aren't all that effective.
(For now, I'd actually rather have 120mm than 140mm fans; 120mm fans are very easy to obtain, but
none of the top brands — ebmpapst, Nidec, NMB, or Sanyo Denki — offer a 140mm model.
OK, Delta does make a few FFB and TFA models in that size, but those are jet-engines absolutely
not suitable for a home or office PC and even if you could stand the noise, they only come in 24V and 48V versions anyway. The 172mm round fans aren't even close to quiet either.)
The case does provide for an additional 80mm front fan below the installed 120mm unit but that would go behind the front part of the chassis — which would limit you to using the rearmost set of mounting holes for the lower 2 HDDs (it would be 3 if they didn't render the third from the bottom unusable with that last-minute "reinforcement"), making an already cramped case even more cramped.
Without the "extra" fan installed, the opening for it does nothing more than let some of the air taken in by the 120mm front fan go right back out.
My assessment of it:
Pros- Low price (not that I care much)
- Front audio jacks actually work
Cons- Dubious front fan (−1)
- Not that solid (−1.5)
- Lazy adaption of an old design (−2)
- Poor air filter (−0.5)
- LEDs are too bright (and placed behind the air filter) (−0.5)
- Cramped interior — HDDs block off parts of the board (not unique to this case, but still…) (−1)
Score: 3.5/10
YMMV on the painted interior, but IMHO it does little for the system's looks (considering that no ordinary user is actively looking at the back of their PC), adds to the cost for no real benefit, and as the paint is non-conductive, can potentially interfere with correct earthing of each part of the chassis (which is important for shielding — otherwise RFI can increase). So not quite a Fail Award, but I still would not recommend it to anyone.
Frankly, I'm awfully tempted to think that
I could design a better PC case than many of the current budget offerings.
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
My PC: Core i3 4130 on GA‑H87M‑D3H with GT640 OC 2GiB and 2 * 8GiB Kingston HyperX 1600MHz, Kingston SA400S37120G and WD3003FZEX‑00Z4SA0, Pioneer BDR‑209DBKS and Optiarc AD‑7200S, Seasonic G‑360, Chenbro PC31031, Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3.