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I-StarUsa S-8 Storm Series
Chassis
Through the years I've used a large
number of cases, from that experience I've learned what to look for and
what to look out for. I-Star which is known for it's quality server
chassis, is now offering a mid-tower case for the masses. Let's take a
look and see how this new offering to the vastly competitive mid-tower
chassis market stacks up!

The case comes in a pretty
non-descript box, one nice thing, THE HANDLE WORKS! It didn't pull
through like other case boxes I've had.

Looking at the front you can see
the power and reset buttons. In addition are the USB, fire wire, mic
and audio ports. Fire wire ports on the front of a case used to be a
luxury, now they have almost become standard equipment. Very nice clean
looking appearance, the buttons operate solidly and smoothly.

Taking the front cover off reveals
the five 5.25" bays and the two 3.5" bays. This many bays in a mid
tower is pretty much standard currently, but then you see the first
hefty 120mm fan mounting point. Anyone that has had a case with this
size fans know these are the ticket for max cooling and low noise.

Looking on the left side we see the
venting, one is just a passive vent for the video cards and the other is
the mounting point for a 80mm fan.

Taking the side cover off reveals a
CPU duct to help channel that frosty air directly to the CPU. I see
more and more cases using these and they actually work quite nicely.
Coupled with a quiet fan on your heat sink and you have the makings for
a cool and quiet system. For the ultimate in over clocking add a 80mm
fan to push the cold air down on the CPU and you are reaching water
cooling efficiency.

Looking inside we find all the
cable hookups for the front panel as well as the tool free expansion
card mount and tool free 5.25 and 3.5 external bays and three tool free
3.5" hidden bays. Very nice!

The only thing not to like about
tool free mountings is if they just plain don't hold, not the case
here. Nice and solid for the expansion cards and very easy to use.
Typically manufacturers use a bar type arrangement that secures all the
cards, problem is that when you lift that bar your slot covers may fall
out. This setup lets you loosen just the card you want. Very handy!

Here's what comes in the brown box,
all the stuff you need to do a full build out of the case, plus
instructions on how to do it and a parts list. It's nice to have
pictures to follow along if you are a novice system builder.

Rounding out the first look we see
the rear with the tool free expansion card mount from the outside and
the second 120mm cooling fan. Serious air flow for serious cooling.
Also notice the power supply opening, looks like your PSU will just fall
right out. Not if you use one of I-Star's redundant PSU units it
won't. A nice feature for building mission critical type systems.

Power Supply
Options:
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300/400 Watts Redundant Power
Supply |
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300/400/500 Watts Dual AC
Redundant Power Supply |
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350/400/500 Watts ATX
Power Supply
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580/620 SSI 2.2 ATX Power
Supply w/ 1x120mm Fan |
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600/650/700/750 EPS 12V
Industrial Grade Power Supply |
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DP-300R8-DC48v
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PS2 300 watts -48V DC
redundant power supply |
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PS2 320 watts 24V/-48V DC
power supply |
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PS2 400 watts -48V DC power
supply |

Otherwise use this little bracket
to mount your standard ATX PSU.
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