By Kevin Lee
The Corsair Obsidian 1000D is, hands down, one of the biggest and baddest PC cases to come out in recent years. With room for two complete systems, up to five graphics cards, two 480mm radiators in front and another 420mm up top, there’s no other chassis on the market that can hold more components.
Aside from being a monster case in size and capacity, Corsair employed a bunch of new features with its latest Obsidian case, including liquid-cooling drawers and French doors to hide all the PC power cables – and even six SSD trays.
The only thing more impressive than everything the Corsair Obsidian 1000D can hold is its extensive, two-year product development cycle. Luckily, we got to hear all about the super tower straight from Aaron Neal, Corsair‘s Manager of Worldwide Product Marketing for DIY Components.
As you might have guessed, the 1000D was a massively complex PC case, and Neal tells us that “there were a lot of things that, once we had an idea, once we prototyped it, it was like ‘Oh wait, that doesn’t work.’ Let’s go back, try and do something a little bit different.”
The goldilocks principle
At its core, Neal says the Obsidian 1000D was always …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components