![]() That should be plenty of internal storage, even with two systems inside. AS far as storage goes, the 1000D will hold a whopping 11 drives five in 3.5-inch format and six 2.5-inch each in their own dedicated compartments. The Mini-ITX system sits above the ATX PSU mount. The motherboard island is backed by French-door-type rear compartment that holds the 2.5” drives and hides cables. Inside the case, the primary E-ATX system mounts to a raised motherboard ‘island’ with cable routing holes throughout. The controller also has four temperature probes and contains the plugs for the front panel USB 3.0 ports. Using the integrated Corsair Commander Pro fan and lighting controller (mounted on the motherboard tray), users are able to control up to six PWM fans and two RGB LED strips through the iCUE software. Unique to the 1000D, the power button and all USB ports have RGB LED backlighting in them lighting up that portion of the case I don’t recall seeing that in a chassis before. Other buttons/ports include the power and reset buttons and 3.5 mm jacks for headphone and microphone. Sparing little expense, the front panel is loaded with modern options including two USB 3.1 Type-C ports (a rarity to have one today), and four USB 3.0 ports for a lot of USB storage options. Both glass side panels use hinges at the back and open up for easier access.īuy Corsair Obsidian Series 1000D on Towards the bottom is space for the two power supplies as well as a Mini-ITX sized motherboard. The back panel has a total of seven expansion slots for PCIe, nine including the vertical GPU mounting space (video card can be mounted either way). The chassis supports eight fans up front (13 in total) to get cool air in the chassis. There is ample room in front for intake through its large dust filter (dust filters are also found on the rear, top, and bottom) so airflow shouldn’t be an issue. The louvered top is raised from the chassis allowing for air to exhaust, though perhaps not free-flowing. Where there isn’t glass, on top (the two flanking panels), there are brushed aluminum details adding to the overall high-end vibe it exudes. The exterior of the case is adorned by the smoke tinted tempered glass panels. ![]() The entire case, empty, weighs in at a hefty 65lbs making this thing a bit cumbersome to move around I'd image. The chassis measures in at a real estate-heavy 27.3” x 12.1” x 27.3” (LxWxH) which easily eclipses the 900D from years ago. ![]() The inside is designed to house some of the most ambitious and powerful PCs imaginable inside its dual-system, three-chambered layout. The exterior styling uses brushed aluminum and includes four smoke tempered glass panels which help give the Super-Tower a premium appearance that can be a focal point of an enthusiast build. It's not all about what can fit on the inside however that makes the case. So large in fact, it is able to house a complete E-ATX and Mini-ITX system concurrently - two motherboards, two power supplies, two full PCs in one case. Just as its name implies the case is quite large. A few days ago, Corsair announced the launch of its most ambitious and largest case yet with the new Obsidian 1000D Super-Tower PC Case.
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