I think the half-and-half design of the Phantom 630 roof panel's rear area is one of the most eye-catching designs on the entire case. This feature adds very little to the cost of the chassis, but is a convenient addition for many users.Ī recession to the nine PCI slots and IO panel makes protruding cables less of an interference-causing issue. We like NZXT's continued inclusion of an SD card reader on its higher-end cases. As shown in the above picture, one has to hold the door open, or let a DVD drive's tray do that job in an everyday scenario. One annoying feature is its insistence to automatically close unless the holding force is removed in a pinpoint location. The door itself doesn't weigh much, but it is constructed from thick plastic and feels sturdy. Opening the magnetised front panel door reveals four 5.25″ bays and an SD card reader. A mesh panel and dust filter mounted behind it ensures that that front fan receives cool, clean air. Two angled halves of the plastic front panel converge to form a sharp, eye-catching protrusion that spans the entirety of the Phantom 630's face. We're sure that it won't appeal to all users, but if gunmetal isn't for you, the Phantom 630 does also ship in matte black and white variants. Gunmetal is a unique colour that NZXT has shown support for in its recent releases. The uniform right side panel features no divergences from the Phantom 630's gunmetal colour scheme. This should help multi-VGA users keep their graphics cards cool, even when they are packed tightly together. NZXT mounts one of the company's 200mm, 800 RPM fans in the side panel, behind a filtered mesh cover. Very similar to the Phantom 820 in appearance, the 630 features an intelligently-positioned side panel window that can be used to show off the CPU area and some of the VGA cards (when looking from an above angle).
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