Amazon[amazon.com] has CORSAIR 2500D AIRFLOW Small-Tower mATX Dual Chamber PC Case for $98.13 - 30% when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $68.69. Shipping is free.
Price $91.30 lower (57% savings) than the list price of $159.99 $77.76 lower (53% savings) than the previous price of $146.45
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Amazon[amazon.com] has CORSAIR 2500D AIRFLOW Small-Tower mATX Dual Chamber PC Case for $98.13 - 30% when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $68.69. Shipping is free.
Price $91.30 lower (57% savings) than the list price of $159.99 $77.76 lower (53% savings) than the previous price of $146.45
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
No go for IL area for me. Next build I want to use the behind the back mobo connector motherboards from MSI or if Asus gets a better AMD one Asus so this case would have been a great pick up for that.
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I bought this on a similar sale from Woot recently. Be aware that it is incredibly thick due to the dual chamber. It's a micro ATX that happens to be massive. It looks like a short filing cabinet. Check measurements if you're thinking of putting this on your desk. Mine also had a defective front USB A port.
Dual chambers are the best design! I've been building PC's since 8086 with a 8087 separate chip, and not much has changed.
But with larger PSU's, more cabling, cabling for GPUs, and the need for additional AIO and cooling fans ... it gets VERY crowded in there. The dual chamber designs fix a whole lot of problems.
One thing to consider, a case that can handle "back connect" motherboards. If you really like a clean look, this will probably be the solution for you going forward. But for right now, a dual chamber case is it.
Size-wise, think mid-tower heigh and dimensions, but a hands-width (4") thicker where you run all of the other cables, SSDs or drives. The case is a bit heavier, but unless you're going to LAN parties, it won't matter.
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But with larger PSU's, more cabling, cabling for GPUs, and the need for additional AIO and cooling fans ... it gets VERY crowded in there. The dual chamber designs fix a whole lot of problems.
One thing to consider, a case that can handle "back connect" motherboards. If you really like a clean look, this will probably be the solution for you going forward. But for right now, a dual chamber case is it.
Size-wise, think mid-tower heigh and dimensions, but a hands-width (4") thicker where you run all of the other cables, SSDs or drives. The case is a bit heavier, but unless you're going to LAN parties, it won't matter.
Good luck!
Jon
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