Thermaltake takes a new design direction

CES 2013: Useful goodies are not forgotten either

Thermaltake TT logoThermaltake was showing off a new look for their cases at CES, gone is the old ‘not Starcraft’ theme, in it’s place is a much cleaner face. Broad design strokes are one end of the spectrum, useful little goodies are the other, and luckily there were lots of them too.

While the old cases were aimed at a particular audience, lets just call them not anyone at SemiAccurate, the new designs are fairly nice. For the most part cases that are complex for a functional reason are OK, but these are few and far between. Ones overdone for mere design usually don’t impress us, and that is the direction Thermaltake was headed recently. The new Chaser A31 and A41 series move TT back in the right direction.

Thermaltake Chaser A31, A41, and A41 Snow cases

Thermaltake Chaser A31, A41, and A41 Snow

The new Chaser series is clean, simple, and cheaper than before. All three are around $99 MSRP, with the white variants no longer commanding a slight price premium. This isn’t to say they cut back on anything, the new designs still have a headphone holder on the side and all the other nice touches TT has made standard. I for one am glad they changed direction.

From there, the Urban S31 and S41 take the clean look to a new extreme with a completely blank front face and nicely rounded corners. At $89 and $129, they bracket the Chaser series in price but are aimed at a different market. Chaser is the gamer oriented line, Urban is a more office friendly line. The one thing that impressed me about the S41 is the large front door, normally a cheap piece of floppy plastic, this is anything but. It was light, reinforced very well, and had slick magnetic latches that screamed Apple. The early prototype was a bit rough after a week of CES manhandling, but if the production version lives up to this one, it will be a very nice case indeed. We shall see at the next show, but are cautiously optimistic.

Thermaltake Bigwater 760 and Water 3 coolers

BigWater 760 Pro and Water 3.0 Extreme

Moving on to a different topic, we have the long overdue and very welcome comeback of some Thermaltake water cooling products. The BigWater 760 Pro is the classic dual 5.25″ drive bay CPU cooler that the company used to make many of. This updated one has a much wider radiator than before, a variable speed fan, 3/8″ tubing, and a universal CPU mounting kit. If nothing else, what else are you going to use a 5.25″ bay for? The Water 3.0 Extreme is the more common type with two 120mm fans and a 240mm radiator to shed excess heat through. They list for $139 and $129 respectively, but for only $10 more, we would take the BigWater every time.

Thermaltake Max 5 Quad and Duet drive cages

Two cases for six HDDs

Last up are something far more useful than they seem at first glance, the Max 5 Quad and Max 5 Duet HDD bays. They are essentially converters so you can fit four 2.5″ HDDs or SSDs in to a 5.25″ drive bay for the Quad, two 2.5″ drives in a 3.5″ bay for the Duet. All drives have hot plug quick release brackets for easy replacement, but so does the entire bay. Both Quad and Duet models have handles so you can pull the entire cage out in a hot plug fashion just like individual drives.

This may sound pointless, but if you are a small business or have security concerns, all you need to do at night is shut your machine down and take your entire RAID array with you. It undocks with a tug, and slides back in the next morning. This concept is not unique by any means, but it has usually been the domain of the server set, and the price tags reflect that market. The only real difference between those pricey devices and the Max 5 line is the lack of a physical lock on the cage. Then again, at only $39 for the Quad, $29 for the Duet, how can you complain?S|A

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Charlie Demerjian

Roving engine of chaos and snide remarks at SemiAccurate
Charlie Demerjian is the founder of Stone Arch Networking Services and SemiAccurate.com. SemiAccurate.com is a technology news site; addressing hardware design, software selection, customization, securing and maintenance, with over one million views per month. He is a technologist and analyst specializing in semiconductors, system and network architecture. As head writer of SemiAccurate.com, he regularly advises writers, analysts, and industry executives on technical matters and long lead industry trends. Charlie is also available through Guidepoint and Mosaic. FullyAccurate