It appears you have not yet registered with our community. To register please click here...

 
Go Back [M] > Madshrimps > Articles & Howto's
NZXT ZERO Case Review: How quiet can seven fans be? NZXT ZERO Case Review: How quiet can seven fans be?
FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


NZXT ZERO Case Review: How quiet can seven fans be?
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 8th March 2007, 15:50   #1
Madshrimp
 
jmke's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: 7090/Belgium
Posts: 79,020
jmke has disabled reputation
Default NZXT ZERO Case Review: How quiet can seven fans be?

The NZXT company is young, yet their cases have already gained a solid foot-hold on the market. Today we test the ZERO, a case with a total of seven 12cm fans and a 8cm top mounted fan. Does it move around the floor on its own? Can it double as a hovercraft? Read on..

http://www.madshrimps.be/gotoartik.php?articID=535
__________________
jmke is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9th March 2007, 02:51   #2
KTMitch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Wow, that has to be one of the best reviews I have ever read for a computer case, and I have read quite a lot recently. Liquid3D, you really know your stuff.

The aero- and thermal-dynamic information was interesting and enlightening. And the case review itself was thorough and descriptive. The only subject I saw missing was a mention to how easy the install process was.

I have four questions about the case.
One: What is you're take on the quality of the front door? The review on hexus.net thought it was particularly cheap feeling. But their entire review seemed to be negative.
Two: How easy was it to manage wires in the Zero? I've read a couple of complaints that there is very little ability to manage wires efficiently in the case.
Three: How is the exterior finish? I am not entirely convinced on the 'orange-peel' finish. How easily does it smudge?
Four: Would you use this case as your own rig (in an air cooling situation)?

Overall, this review has definitely piqued my interest in this case.
  Reply With Quote
Old 9th March 2007, 10:12   #3
Rutar
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I like that company, 6 120mm fans
  Reply With Quote
Old 12th March 2007, 03:29   #4
Liquid3D
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by KTMitch View Post
Wow, that has to be one of the best reviews I have ever read for a computer case, and I have read quite a lot recently. Liquid3D, you really know your stuff.

The aero- and thermal-dynamic information was interesting and enlightening. And the case review itself was thorough and descriptive. The only subject I saw missing was a mention to how easy the install process was.

I have four questions about the case.
One: What is you're take on the quality of the front door? The review on hexus.net thought it was particularly cheap feeling. But their entire review seemed to be negative.
Two: How easy was it to manage wires in the Zero? I've read a couple of complaints that there is very little ability to manage wires efficiently in the case.
Three: How is the exterior finish? I am not entirely convinced on the 'orange-peel' finish. How easily does it smudge?
Four: Would you use this case as your own rig (in an air cooling situation)?

Overall, this review has definitely piqued my interest in this case.
Sorry about those areas I missed. Sometimes while trying to focuson one subject I may negklect another. Recently I have noticed the exterior does smudge. it's easily cleaned and as long as you don't handle the case too often it's not bad for the finish.

The front door is made from plastic and aluminum, yet it's only about one thrid of the front panel height, so it's not that problematic. I can understand why they would think it was "cheap" feeling, but it works and while my Kandlaf case doors are solid aluminum I don't like the sound of the aluminum scraping against aluminum when they close or if their not closed in the right order they don't close. I'm not picking on the Kandalf it's just an example of what I have here right now. The door on the ZERO is made the way it is so the power switch could be accessable from the outside. Of course the Reset button is inside and I was pressing that button for the first 30-minutes after I built the rig until I found the power button arounf the front hehe. They should have kept them both exterior.

The wires were another area I missed, it does get a little crowded in there, however; I didn't mention it because I haven't found many cases where this isn't a problem with sleeved cables. Ironically as their supposed to ,make things neater, they tend to be bulky. PCPower&Cooling in their effort to produce the finest quality has made their ATX power cable especially stiff, but the problem seems to be case height and depth. If you want your case a little smaller like the ZERO you do make sacrifices.

Installation wasn't really a problem so long as you are organized. Don't try to install memory after you've got all the other devices in, be sure to hook up IDE connectors before power cords. I took all the cords from the PSU (as I usually do) and tape them up to the top of the case to clear room for mobo installation second (PSU is first).

Finally would I use this case in my own sysytem if I was air-cooling? Well if I could have it for $109 it 's better then some cases at $160 but it's not better (in theory I haven't tested them head to head ) then the Antec 900 for $119 at Newegg I would recommend this case over the ZERO and thanks to you I will amend my article.

Thank you for writing in here's the link to the Antec 900 and here's JMKE's article on that case. In his conclusion he stated filters are a problem, and steel makes it difficult for LAN. This exemplifies how difficult a time end-users have finding a decent LAN case so they're dragging along their tower cases. You have to figure it this way, if you want top show off your best at a LAN Party Host One! Or when you buy your next high end rig don't sell the parts from the old one and search for a LAN case that will hold them.

Anyway you can see why I wrote that intro, case makers are hitting the mark in one area and missing the point in another. We should have to make sacrifices for a $100 plus case, meaning at the least the it should be capable of extricating heat from the enclosure. Aluminum isn't that costly and you can use Lucite if the airflow is correct. All it takes are several well placed fans and filters on each (except exhaust) so I pull my hair out in frustration and feel your pain.

Last edited by Liquid3D : 12th March 2007 at 03:35.
  Reply With Quote
Old 13th March 2007, 01:45   #5
stevem
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Good overview of thermal flow, Liquid3D. It's surprising how many case designers make poor choices regarding thermodynamics, flow dynamics & pressure, when this stuff has been modelled since the inception of the ATX spec. It's not as though cost would be severely affected, either...
  Reply With Quote
Old 13th March 2007, 11:24   #6
KTMitch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Wow, thanks for the quick and in-depth reply!

It is entirely understandable that you missed some subjects. Its almost expected for such a well written (and large) article. And it should be the job of us readers to point out any issues.

I'll definitely take a more detailed look at the Antec 900. From jmke's article, it sounds comparable to the Zero. Its my personal opinion that the Zero looks better, however.

I wholeheartedly agree. There seems to be a rift between the case manufacturers and the consumer. From the points you guys have made, to the simple location of front USB and audio connections, the manufacturers seems to be totally disconnected from the real world demand.

You've made a fan of me. I'll be happily awaiting more case reviews.
  Reply With Quote
Old 13th March 2007, 11:35   #7
Rutar
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Liquid3D View Post
The front door is made from plastic and aluminum, yet it's only about one thrid of the front panel height, so it's not that problematic. I can understand why they would think it was "cheap" feeling, but it works.
brushed aluminium is the best material to make anything out of it, especially when everything else is plywood and plastic nowadays

Dust isn't as visible on it and fingerprints are not an issue and it feels good.

The shiney black plastic that is so dam popular today for many thngs but it won't look good the second you took it out of the packaging.


I think doors in general are stupid for 90% of the users yet so many cases have them (especially if you are too lazy to look for no-cd cracks).
  Reply With Quote
Old 26th April 2007, 14:51   #8
Madshrimp
 
jmke's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: 7090/Belgium
Posts: 79,020
jmke has disabled reputation
Default

Hey Keith,

I just finished testing the NZXT Adamas which has 4x120mm fans, same model as the ones in the Zero, perception of sound can be quite different between people I find these 120mm fans at 12v to quite noisy, far from dead quiet; especially compared to a 1200rpm Papst or 800rpm Noctua.

at 50cm the noise difference is definitely noticeable (about 4-5dBA) between the 2x120mm NZXT fans and 2x120mm Papst/Noctua setup.
__________________
jmke is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
NZXT Beta EVO Mid Tower Case Review jmke WebNews 1 4th May 2011 18:07
NZXT Vulcan mATX Case Review jmke WebNews 0 30th June 2010 14:08
NZXT Hades Crafted Mid-Tower Case Review jmke WebNews 0 30th January 2010 14:40
NZXT Hades Case Review jmke WebNews 0 21st January 2010 10:05
NZXT Gamma Gaming Case Review jmke WebNews 0 23rd November 2009 10:34
NZXT Tempest Airflow King ATX Case Review jmke Articles & Howto's 1 14th May 2009 19:27
NZXT WHISPER Classic Series PC Case Review jmke WebNews 0 16th March 2009 17:27
NZXT Whisper Silent System PC Case Review jmke WebNews 0 15th January 2009 12:03
[M] NZXT Tempest Airflow King ATX Case Review jmke WebNews 1 20th November 2008 18:03
NZXT Tempest Case Review jmke WebNews 0 26th May 2008 13:21

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:24.


Powered by vBulletin® - Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO