The H7 Flow also offers decent cable-routing options. If you’re looking to add a bunch of hard disks, sadly there’s just the basic two 3.5in mounts in a removable cage in the base of the case, which can also be used for 2.5in SSDs, in addition to four dedicated mounts for the latter behind the motherboard tray and on top of the PSU cover. The roof and front fan mounts can house up to 360mm radiators, with the front section also able to house up to three 140mm fans, and with space for 60mm-thick radiators, making it an excellent case for watercooling systems or AIO liquid coolers. Out of the box, the three cases’ fan arrangements differ too, with the H7 and H7 Flow offering front and rear 120mm fans that spin up to 1,200rpm, while the H7 Elite includes four larger 140mm fans. The H7 Flow’s exterior is otherwise unblemished, while the H7 Elite and H7 have extra vents in their side panel to boost cooling, due to them lacking a vented front panel. However, that means there’s no microphone input, so you’ll need to use your motherboard or sound card’s own input or a USB headset in order to be able to talk to people. Power, 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 2 x USB 3, stereoĬooling 3x120mm/3x140mm front fan mounts (1 x 120mm fan included), 1 x 120mm/140mm rear fan mount (120mm fan included), 3 x 120/2 x 140mm roof fan mounts (fans not included)ģ.2 Gen 2 Type-C port and a single audio jack output for a headset. Up to 50% OFF EaseUS Video Tools (RecExperts, Video Editor, VideoKit, Video Downloader, Video Converter, Video Compressor and MakeMyAudio).Deal: 10% off for Parallels Desktop (full license & 1st year of subscriptions only).You can support the site directly via Paypal donations ☕. TNR earns Amazon affiliate commissions from qualifying purchases.
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