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The
Cavalier is advertised as a tool-free enclosure and short of actually
bolting the motherboard onto the enclosure's motherboard tray, that
statement holds true enough. The side panel is secured by thumb screws,
which also have Philips head taps in the screw head in case you
wrench them to tightly and can't get them to loosen with your bare
hands. The other case panel and the provided 350 watt power supply are
held in place regular Philips head screws that will need a screwdriver
to remove. The power supply isn't held to the enclosure with an
adapter plate that we are accustomed to seeing on the high end
enthusiast cases, but this shouldn't be an area of concern as the holes
are fixed to accept typical ATX power supplies anyway. The small beige
tabs that are pictured to the left of the expansion port are locking
tabs that will fasten the PCI or AGP card without using a screw. The
very top expansion port has the audio pass-through cable which is
required if you intend to use the analog Vu meter on the front of the
enclosure. As usual, the color coded ATX I/O panel is removable if you
use a motherboard that doesn't conform to the PC97 Standards way of
thinking.

From this angle we can see how the clips hold the expansion cards dust
cover a little better. There is a slot on the motherboard tray that will
hold the bottom of the expansion card to keep it from sliding around
while the plastic clip holds the top. This picture also shows us the
backside of the pass-through adapter for the Vu meter.

Here we can see the simple yet elaborate method of tool-free drive
installation. Each 5¼ bay has its own locking mechanism to snug down the
installed drive. Once the front bezel of the drive is lined up to the
leading edge of the faceplate you simply slide a lever rearward and then
snap a lock into place to prevent the slide from inadvertently letting
go of the installed drive. It really is that quick and easy.

The
3½" drive bays are treated equally well with the locking system. Though
this picture doesn't show it too well, there is a nice gap between the
3½" drive bays frame and the far side chassis structure. This offers a
very convenient place to stow extra long power cords and ribbon cables.
Since the Cavalier does not have a removable motherboard tray there has
been no effort to use any type of quick disconnects on the USB, Firewire,
Audio or complex header I/O wires. This leads to the mess of necessity
which is present in just about every enclosure. Referring back to that
nice gap in the drive bay frame and the case chassis, stowing the extra
cable length is a piece of cake.
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