Check out our coverage of the new Cooler Master NR200P concept as well (with GPU showcase): ua-cam.com/video/EgUtAo6mlws/v-deo.html And our discussion of Intel's new Battlemage (Xe2, technically) architecture! ua-cam.com/video/MGD41i5QCyk/v-deo.html
I do love big cases. My current is the Thermaltake Core X9, which houses my EVGA X-79 Dark, 1680-V2 @ 4.8GHz all core, 32GB (8x4GB) Dominator GT 2133 @2400, and a GTX Titan XP, all on a custom loop by me. I got the Core X9 because I was not able to get the Core WP200. So yeah, I like big cases! My favourite case of all time though, is the Corsair AIR 540. Super fun and easy to build in, be it air or water cooled. Have a great day, Steve and the GN Team! o7
Thank you Steve for letting us know that Intel doesn’t want you saying “Z890” or “LGA1851” in videos. We would be in absolutely grave danger if a cognitohazard like that ended up in a video viewed by thousands, potentially millions, of people.
@@greebj Or maybe you're just giving Intel marketing too much credit? Why do so many believe in 7D chess explanations or Ghost of Kyiv or Putin is playing 8D chess, holding back the "good stuff"
SCP-1851 is a doll that resembles a 1.57 meter tall female Caucasian with brown hair and blue eyes. Upon contact the subject will undergo systematic conversion, changing it into a rudimentary doll. The initial stage of the conversion is the shrinking of the subject, ending when the subject shrinks to one tenth of its size. The subject’s internal mass becomes either a hollow cavity or cotton, based on analysis of discarded there are rumors that this supernatural AI is powered by intel inside an LGA1851 processor. Knowledge of the possessor presents a cognito hazard that may lead to watching endless promotions about AI.
@@Amp_Edition Because there were like 100 people in one room who all traveled from around the world to be there and my immune system is always at an all-time low during events due to the push! It'll be fiiiine.
Trade shows in general are a cesspool for any kind of infectious diseases due to the amount of people forced into relatively small indoor spaces for hours and hours.
Wait, why can't anyone say LGA1851 or Z890? I don't want to get anyone in trouble for saying LGA1851 or Z890, but i don't understand why they wouldn't be allowed to say LGA1851 or Z890.
@@JohnWesleyDavison It's corporate Intel speaking from that one, basically if i'm not mistaken since neither LGA1851 or Z890 have been officially disclosed yet they've put everyone under NDA, the only information we officially got is that it's going to be called Arrow-Lake. It's of course rather stupid as Steve discussed because it's obvious what these boards will be called just by looking at them closer, and people online long figured it out already as well.
Loving all the case coverage. I'm looking to build a new PC in the next few months and the big parts (CPU, GPU, RAM) are all pretty easy to chose. But cases? Love having more data and coverage of all my options. Thanks Steve!
@@GamersNexus Hi Steve, Greetings from Germany. I would love to see a video: Test DIY hacks to improve your temperatures! From deshrouding GPUs, using 3D printed ducts like Optimum tech did or sealing gaps for example between fans and cases/ fans and radiators or even the sides of cpu coolers to increase the time and surface area the air touches.
This is like the 3rd video where Steve compares something to another product at the Be Quiet booth and we've yet to get a Gamer's Nexus video from the Be Quiet booth. The Light Base 600 might be my case of the show (and one I'd actually want to buy) so I'm looking forward to what Steve has to say about it. Back to you Steve.
@@abavariannormiepleb9470 plastics are not necessarily bad, PCGF30 would be amazing for example. Plastics vary tons, of course the most common is just ABS trash (or even high impact polystyrene, HIPS -- which is the same material but dense as the packing foam)
Wish you guys could do a review of the 1000D, the older brother of the 9000D. It's overkill for 99% of people that was perfect for my "bigger badder PC" fight with my brother. Then again, I get the feeling that a review of the 9000D would almost be like reviewing the 1000D cause they're almost the same thing. Like seriously, there's a few differences but the 9000D feels like a minor modification someone did to a 1000D in their basement and Corsair just decided to mass produce it. I do love my 1000D despite the whole system weighing like 60-70 pounds. I didn't really use it for its intended role, just put a full sized motherboard with a 7950xdx and an Arctic 420 AIO in it with normal case fans, but all that space makes working on it so easy. I definitely recommend it for someone who wants to go all out and just have an enormous, over the top PC that they can sit next to them, look over, and just giggle about due to its size.
Love the 9000D, but i agree the PSU needs better airflow, with with half of it blocked, it still hits the back panel with no way for the air to get out
Would've liked a successor to the 900D though. Not a dual-system kind of case (Already got the 1000D for that), but just a large case with room for lots of radiators - especially 480mm rads.
I mean tbf the 9000D seems like an old design that's been refurbished by some cad engineers -which is pretty much what it is. I'm expecting there to be a 2nd version sometime in the future where these minor things get addressed.
I still like the idea of Dual-motherboard systems in a single (BIG) case, but the ITX doesn't make sense to me. It's just too small of hardware print for me; I need better specs, and yeah that little SF PSU in the back has very POOR cooling. Even if the holes were bigger for air, you still have the door closing behind it, making any air flow to this SF PSU basically non-functional. Loved the case until I saw the LED short out and then Steve identifying the PSU air flow issue. You had me at Hello; but now it's 'Next! ......
In 9000d back side panel. There was holes for power supply fan in the cabnet door but there are no cutout for air to escape on the outter back panel. It was solid. 5:26
6:01 What’s the point of the ventilation holes in the little french door over the PSU if the larger case door without any holes in it sits directly on top of it when closed?
There is a slight air gap between that door and the actual panel, so some room for the air to find its way out the back. But good point overall -- seems to be a ventilation trend with the 3500X!
Always good to see you and Roman together. It's kinda like seeing old friends get together after years of being apart. Love you both! PS: Ask Roman the best way to take a screenshot in Windows!
@@Jzwiz "strongest copyright laws" - what you mean is, the weirdest and unbalanced laws, a mixbosh of old and new, never ran through a filter, full of sediment, 100% oriented to keep the powerful on top.
You did notice holes for the PSU on the 9000D only covered half the fan but didn't mention that there were no holes at all in the side door over that place. 😅
Ive owned a 1000D before. The side door doesn't seal it off and there prob about 10mm between the vent and door. Thats more than enough space for the PSU to draw air in from outside the case. In fact the side door doesn't seal the case off and even if it did that area can still source air from the main chamber. It then exhausts out the back of the case.
I just bought this case. I swapped all of my parts into it PLUS installed a brand new 360 aio.. when i went to put it on my desk i dropped it onto the floot.. about 3 feet. I was quite worried but its totally fine. SLIGHT bend where it hit the ground but its no worse for the wear. Amazing thing.
@@quantum5661 I gave away my 750D (non airflow) about 2 years ago. It has probably been one of the best cases I've owned. I used the SSD mounts to run a Raid 0 of 4 2.5" HDD for a long time before converting to 2.5" Ultrastar's (mounted in a drive cage). Sandy Bridge was a hell of a processor.
Finally, I've had my 1000D for about 5 years now and have been looking forward to a new version, especially as an excuse to start a new build and use link fans, wiring up 32 ML120's using the old commander pro and rgb hub method was painful
Yet anotheg solid video from Steve and the Nexus crew. I love eatching you discuss the engineering behind everything. I've learned a ton from your channel and even more from your coverage of Computex 2024!
On the 9000D the panel that sandwiches the French doors blocks the airflow from the perforations of the doors, which I really like (the doors not the airflow).
Gonna say, after working conventions: that Airborne stuff (or the local shop's knock off) helped me beat the con crud once I dove into it. Take it before and during.
As a 1000D owner I am disappointed with the 9000D. I don't see a lot of differences in size, mostly seems to be cosmetic. I bet you the rear fans won't allow for dual 140mm and the gap between the top and front radiator / fan mounting will also be tiny. It will be nice to see if I can install the 9000D top usb hub on my case, hopefully they were able to put everything into a single cable (I have 4 - 2 for usb 3.0 and 2 for usb c. I had to buy a pcie adapter for the extra connector as almost no motherboards have 2x usb c headers). Not using glass for the front is nice though.
The double wide fans reminds me of the side of my old Rosewill Thor V2, you could have four 120s, or a single 230, however that case felt flimsy, and the open close vents on top came broken on 1 out of 2 of them for me.
Dual system cases are cool. I built a NAS/gaming PC in the Phanteks one a few years back. Significantly higher Spouse Approval Factor than having two boxes in a 1 bedroom apartment lol
Did you notice the French Doors are exactly the same, just one is mounted upside down, obviously to save costs, but it has the same small hole for the PSU.
When I learnt basic motor design many many years ago - something I haven't touched upon since aside from the handful of occasions that I needed to deal with motors, like the one time I was looking at a lathe - I've always learnt it from a 3-phase perspective (Phase coils A, B and C spaced 120 degrees apart). During that time I was looking at the lathe, I remember the main takeway was that single phase is doable, but 3-phase is smoother. The only thing that stops you doing 3-phase is it's more complex - and I wonder if there are additional points of failure in terms of electronics. Cost is another concern I suppose, so I wonder how these Titan coolers compare to the old ones price-wise.
9000D is a pretty insane case. Don't think I'd have a use for much of its intended purposes, but I do love large cases because of how much easier they are to work with when you have large components. 7000D is looking pretty appealing for my next major PC upgrade since I've reached the space limit of my current case(newer GPUs and CPU coolers won't fit in it since it's a very old case too narrow for modern hardware without excessive modification.
Yes. It would be disastrous if we knew as a result of Steve mentioning that their next socket was going to be called LGA1851 and their next high end chipset Z890 because it's such a departure from their past naming schemes, where LGA sockets contain how many pins they have and the chipset goes up by a hundred with each generation
i like the 1000d super tower case alot im glad theyre making a revised version of the same case but more modern but that still has the 2 pc in one case feature
I have a 1000d, was running 2 setups as a his and hers thing, absolutely love it Id love to see a review on the 9000D because if i didnt have the 1000d, id buy it.
I still really like my 1000D, I'm very impressed with the updated version! I am also not doing well financially right now, the 1000D was part of my covid build that I splurged on hard. I will just be daily driving it until it no longer suits my needs, at which point I'll look to whatever Corsair is selling then lol. Still this is a fantastic update and I'm happy for everyone who gets to build in it, because the original was and still is my favorite case of all time edit: and for anyone wondering, I stuck 2 80mm radiators in the front, which takes up all the space a second row of fans would, so I ONLY have 11 fans in my build, since I was reusing fans from a previous build and the radiator conflicts with 2 additional front fans. I went with their white 2400rpm LL fans because they were the only 2400rpm fan corsair made, and I needed the extra RPM to overcome the lack of push/pull on an 80mm thick rad, even with the low fin density it was designed with to allow more air through. Performance is of course fantastic, and it honestly only spins up past 1400-1500rpm when I have headphones on while I'm gaming, so I never hear it thankfully. Some day I might replace those radiators with dual 4x120 60mm thick rads, and then I will be able to put the maximum 24 fans in my build (i would also have to add 3 more to the top radiator), assuming I don't also figure out a way to mount a 240mm rad to the exhaust fans, at which point I could theoretically hit 26 lmao. That would also mean the new case supports 34 max with that same kind of config, but it's still wild af regardless. that many fans would cost more than some cheap PCs lmao
I hope your spirits are buoyed knowing you are sort of at the center of the world today and doing amazing reporting. Getting sick from exposure and fatigue is irritating so rest when you can and see you after this marathon. Time off for all for recovery!
4:17 I'd say that's a triweave pattern. Something that has been used for a long time in stamped leather. Though apparently it is also somehow actually possible to weave, though even looking at diagrams, I don't understand it lol.
. And here I was thinking I was going a little overboard with a thermaltake core p8. That bugger weighs 50 lb without anything in it, and it takes 18 fans. Idea. That thing literally takes twice the number of fans.... Dear God, I kind of want one 🙂
E.Engineering interpretation: so it's a brushless DC motor (typical) using field-orientated control (new standard) which doesnt require hall-effect sensors for speed control or relative positioning (which phase should be turned on next/when)
What would be nice is if they had the Elite Capellix style pump head lighting as an option for those AIOs so you can use third-party plates like V1 Tech makes.
I should do a computex GamersNexus marathon ;) Lovely Video as always Steve. I have to admit that German pronauciation was really good. Greeting from Germany have a good time and I hope you find more to make my inner nerd smile ;)
@@IIARROWS It shutdown automatically because it was overheating. This looks REALLY bad on corsairs part. The case fans stayed on, but the motherboard/usb hub fans all terminated with the crash.
@@paulmiddleton7168 No... how can you say that? Beside, if you look not all fans shut down. Maybe one connector wasn't well connected and Steve moving the case and cable caused a temporary disconnection. Beside, a system can reboot even without overheating. And those system, if really on, they are idle. If not just stuck at boot with no OS installed at all. They are not doing any work to overheat.
are we ignoring @6:00 where you show the vents in the french door for the PSU but not noticing the fact that there is a solid piece of sheet metal right on top of it when the rear side panel is closed??
An interesting solution for the 3500X's bottom shroud could be to ship reversed flow PSUs that pulls air from the back and exhaust inside the case. This way you could point it upward and send (mostly) cool air to the GPU.
I doubt I will ever be at a point where its reasonable for me to need a dual pc system let alone a $500 case for it, but if I do the 9000D looks pretty cool xD
@@jtreedy116 Fair, I would honestly be lying if I said I wouldn't consider getting it if I had $500 to drop on a case even without having any reasonable use/need for it lol
hold on, on the 9000D, i am more worried about the PSU fan behind the french doors being blocked by the large outer door than not having the holes for the full fan as mentioned, since behind those holes is the outer door... Timestamp as 6:00, Am i missing something here? The large door opened at 5:08 covers what little ventilation that PSU has, what is being discussed at 6:00.
I really want to get a parts list for that 9000D because that system looks SICK. if anyone can get a parts list for *everything* included that would be amazing!
I'm really curious about the 3 phase and how they are doing it. Typically in smaller stuff they would align the electromagnets 90 degrees apart. I'm almost guessing they are cheaping out and just saying 3 phase. In larger pumps the motors can actually have 3 phases of power. I am certain they could do this with circuits, create several square wave generators from the original dc in. However with adding more hardware also adds more points of failure. In short, I'd really love to see a channel take the pump apart and see how it's wired. Then also run testing on it out actually affects the flow, or if it is just a reliability thing and was it worth it to go to that type of motor?
I've almost always used full size towers for building computers since around '97. My first full size, at 14yo, was a server donated to my high school computer troubleshooting class from Intel. The teacher had never used a computer before in his life, so I thought the class and so I was allowed to have free reign to any of the hardware. I got my knowledge from my father who had been building and troubleshooting since his navy days and ran his own business building and troubleshooting for companies in the Northwest until he joined Intel, in the southwest.
An aside of the PSU intake on the 9000000D; yes, it's got some intake on those french doors, but if I'm not mistaken, all of it gets cut off by the main back panel?
That 9000D case with the full custom loop and 4 pumps lol - I can tell you now it require at least two people to pickup and weighs a 120 pounds. I don't understand why anyone wants a PC that anytime you want to work on it requires help moving it
I agree it's gotta be so heavy, but I think it's a pretty sweet idea for a streaming PC that can run two PCs inside one case. If I was a streamer I'd definitely go that route instead of having two cases next to each other.
My 1000D surely weighs a ton with 2 480s and 2 360s and two pumps (and yes, I have 32 fans in it). I get it, it's a monster, some of us are marks for this thing. I can't wait to get my hands on a 9000D and do this all over again. Because I'm nuts.
Check out our coverage of the new Cooler Master NR200P concept as well (with GPU showcase): ua-cam.com/video/EgUtAo6mlws/v-deo.html
And our discussion of Intel's new Battlemage (Xe2, technically) architecture! ua-cam.com/video/MGD41i5QCyk/v-deo.html
BY GEORGE YOU'RE RIGHT! Cases need ai too!.... I've got it! A built in self tuning fan system, done entirely with Ai! HAHAHAHHAHAHA
Also Destiny 2 is suing them for stealing their logo
I do love big cases. My current is the Thermaltake Core X9, which houses my EVGA X-79 Dark, 1680-V2 @ 4.8GHz all core, 32GB (8x4GB) Dominator GT 2133 @2400, and a GTX Titan XP, all on a custom loop by me. I got the Core X9 because I was not able to get the Core WP200. So yeah, I like big cases! My favourite case of all time though, is the Corsair AIR 540. Super fun and easy to build in, be it air or water cooled.
Have a great day, Steve and the GN Team! o7
You didn't find out what is the difference between the Obsidian 1000D and the 9000D.
I would have loved to hear some information from you about that.
standards of 30 years ago..
Thank you Steve for letting us know that Intel doesn’t want you saying “Z890” or “LGA1851” in videos. We would be in absolutely grave danger if a cognitohazard like that ended up in a video viewed by thousands, potentially millions, of people.
Intel marketing playing 7D chess here. How many free mentions of LGA1851 and Z890 have they got in the comments already 😂
@@greebjIt's almost like they understood how marketing works.
@@greebj Or maybe you're just giving Intel marketing too much credit? Why do so many believe in 7D chess explanations or Ghost of Kyiv or Putin is playing 8D chess, holding back the "good stuff"
@@greebj With the new Xeon 6 they've increased the chess to 12D (12 memory channels).
SCP-1851 is a doll that resembles a 1.57 meter tall female Caucasian with brown hair and blue eyes. Upon contact the subject will undergo systematic conversion, changing it into a rudimentary doll. The initial stage of the conversion is the shrinking of the subject, ending when the subject shrinks to one tenth of its size. The subject’s internal mass becomes either a hollow cavity or cotton, based on analysis of discarded there are rumors that this supernatural AI is powered by intel inside an LGA1851 processor. Knowledge of the possessor presents a cognito hazard that may lead to watching endless promotions about AI.
"I like that nothing here is branded AI." A true gentleman.
What do you get if you put AI in branded?
Brainded.
Lmao good one.
If I see the word "AI" I only want to hear "Dee" right after it...
And who says Germans don't have humor. That was a zinger
@@greebj nice lol
Enough Corsair fans to make my coarse hair stand on end. 😵💫
Take your upvote!
😂
You win
looking at 1000 quids worth probably. no thanks
Hope you don't get sick, Back to you Steve!
@@Amp_Edition Calm down lmao
@@Amp_Edition Because there were like 100 people in one room who all traveled from around the world to be there and my immune system is always at an all-time low during events due to the push! It'll be fiiiine.
Trade shows in general are a cesspool for any kind of infectious diseases due to the amount of people forced into relatively small indoor spaces for hours and hours.
Bryan from tech yes city got the event bug @Amp_Edition
@@Amp_Edition Tell me you didn't watch the video without telling me you didn't watch the video
Got it, Steve. I will not discuss LGA1851 or Z890 either. Wouldn't want to upset Intel.
Wait, why can't anyone say LGA1851 or Z890? I don't want to get anyone in trouble for saying LGA1851 or Z890, but i don't understand why they wouldn't be allowed to say LGA1851 or Z890.
@@JohnWesleyDavison It's corporate Intel speaking from that one, basically if i'm not mistaken since neither LGA1851 or Z890 have been officially disclosed yet they've put everyone under NDA, the only information we officially got is that it's going to be called Arrow-Lake.
It's of course rather stupid as Steve discussed because it's obvious what these boards will be called just by looking at them closer, and people online long figured it out already as well.
@@CarbonPanther would you have understood the sarcasm if they said LGA1851 or Z890 a 4th time? (I'm just making light fun here if that's not clear)
"What's your name?"
"der8auer"
"How do you spell that?“
"Der Bauer mit Acht."
Nice one, guys.
Im clueless.
as someone who can speak german fluently, thats a good describtion
nein wir nennen es Der Achtauer!
His UA-cam name = Der8auer
Der bauer = The builder
mit acht = with care
acht =8
gib mal acht = be careful
@@PieterPatrick "Acht geben" = to be meticulous, to pay attention
Why is that guy yelling?
The more you buy, the more you save, probably.
Z890 or LGA1851, perhaps
Yeah that room was really quiet 🤔
There weren't even any clouds around.
Loving all the case coverage. I'm looking to build a new PC in the next few months and the big parts (CPU, GPU, RAM) are all pretty easy to chose. But cases? Love having more data and coverage of all my options. Thanks Steve!
We will have an INSANE amount of testing to do! Can't wait.
@@GamersNexus Hi Steve,
Greetings from Germany. I would love to see a video: Test DIY hacks to improve your temperatures!
From deshrouding GPUs, using 3D printed ducts like Optimum tech did or sealing gaps for example between fans and cases/ fans and radiators or even the sides of cpu coolers to increase the time and surface area the air touches.
Not that easy, new cpus and gpus coming out and new RAMS and mobo models
This is like the 3rd video where Steve compares something to another product at the Be Quiet booth and we've yet to get a Gamer's Nexus video from the Be Quiet booth.
The Light Base 600 might be my case of the show (and one I'd actually want to buy) so I'm looking forward to what Steve has to say about it.
Back to you Steve.
corsair cases are starting to fill that niche caselabs had
I miss CaseLabs!
The niche will be attempted to be filled with cheap 0.8 mm steel and lots of plastics… :-|
@@abavariannormiepleb9470 plastics are not necessarily bad, PCGF30 would be amazing for example. Plastics vary tons, of course the most common is just ABS trash (or even high impact polystyrene, HIPS -- which is the same material but dense as the packing foam)
@@abavariannormiepleb9470 a case like this would weigh more than the average person if made out of thick steel lol
Wish you guys could do a review of the 1000D, the older brother of the 9000D. It's overkill for 99% of people that was perfect for my "bigger badder PC" fight with my brother.
Then again, I get the feeling that a review of the 9000D would almost be like reviewing the 1000D cause they're almost the same thing. Like seriously, there's a few differences but the 9000D feels like a minor modification someone did to a 1000D in their basement and Corsair just decided to mass produce it.
I do love my 1000D despite the whole system weighing like 60-70 pounds. I didn't really use it for its intended role, just put a full sized motherboard with a 7950xdx and an Arctic 420 AIO in it with normal case fans, but all that space makes working on it so easy. I definitely recommend it for someone who wants to go all out and just have an enormous, over the top PC that they can sit next to them, look over, and just giggle about due to its size.
This thing is so stupid big, I love it.
Should I choose to splurge one day, maybe. For now my Fractal Torrent is doing just fine. 😎
Love the 9000D, but i agree the PSU needs better airflow, with with half of it blocked, it still hits the back panel with no way for the air to get out
Remember, that's just the SF PSU for the mini itx. The main power supply vents out the back with no issues.
Would've liked a successor to the 900D though. Not a dual-system kind of case (Already got the 1000D for that), but just a large case with room for lots of radiators - especially 480mm rads.
I mean tbf the 9000D seems like an old design that's been refurbished by some cad engineers -which is pretty much what it is.
I'm expecting there to be a 2nd version sometime in the future where these minor things get addressed.
Was hoping they would review it. It's one of those cases where excess grabs you and I just want it.
I still like the idea of Dual-motherboard systems in a single (BIG) case, but the ITX doesn't make sense to me. It's just too small of hardware print for me; I need better specs, and yeah that little SF PSU in the back has very POOR cooling. Even if the holes were bigger for air, you still have the door closing behind it, making any air flow to this SF PSU basically non-functional. Loved the case until I saw the LED short out and then Steve identifying the PSU air flow issue. You had me at Hello; but now it's 'Next! ......
In 9000d back side panel. There was holes for power supply fan in the cabnet door but there are no cutout for air to escape on the outter back panel. It was solid. 5:26
I've been waiting for a 1000D successor, finally
6:01 What’s the point of the ventilation holes in the little french door over the PSU if the larger case door without any holes in it sits directly on top of it when closed?
There is a slight air gap between that door and the actual panel, so some room for the air to find its way out the back. But good point overall -- seems to be a ventilation trend with the 3500X!
wouldn’t it make more sense to then completely get rid of the little door to have a larger air gap for the PSU’s fan?
I was just thinking the same thing.
the thing about it that it doesnt work
Always good to see you and Roman together. It's kinda like seeing old friends get together after years of being apart.
Love you both!
PS: Ask Roman the best way to take a screenshot in Windows!
Answer: use Windows Recall!
In Japan, any picture of that case would have to get pixelated.
@@terryking1094 I assumed it was a joke about how it's so sexy looking it would get blurred
…
I thought it was a confused Korean Fan Death reference
@@terryking1094japan has some of the strongest copyright laws, even streaming a game without permission can get you arrested and has recently
@@Jzwiz "strongest copyright laws" - what you mean is, the weirdest and unbalanced laws, a mixbosh of old and new, never ran through a filter, full of sediment, 100% oriented to keep the powerful on top.
You did notice holes for the PSU on the 9000D only covered half the fan but didn't mention that there were no holes at all in the side door over that place. 😅
I saw that too and asked myself wether there is comment about that 🤣
+1
I think this little detail slipped thru...? @Steve
Ive owned a 1000D before. The side door doesn't seal it off and there prob about 10mm between the vent and door. Thats more than enough space for the PSU to draw air in from outside the case. In fact the side door doesn't seal the case off and even if it did that area can still source air from the main chamber. It then exhausts out the back of the case.
I just bought this case. I swapped all of my parts into it PLUS installed a brand new 360 aio.. when i went to put it on my desk i dropped it onto the floot.. about 3 feet. I was quite worried but its totally fine. SLIGHT bend where it hit the ground but its no worse for the wear. Amazing thing.
I can finally use my PC case as a drone!
I like how the holes for the PSU in the inner door are covered by the outer door anyway.
What are LGA 1851 and Z90? I have herd nothing about it from leaks or seen it printed on boards...
LOL steve will be all over mothboard rigidity on all new cases, get the popcorn out peeps
It looks like that'll be the trend!
The current, PCIe Gen5-capable motherboards with many PCB layers sure like to get bent a lot ;-)
Thanks Steve!
I'm still waiting for a worthy replacement for my 750D airflow
That was a hell of an era for Corsair!
me and my old man still have a 450d and 750d in use, wish we had more cases with a respectable amount of 3.5" and 5.25" bays.
@@quantum5661 I gave away my 750D (non airflow) about 2 years ago. It has probably been one of the best cases I've owned. I used the SSD mounts to run a Raid 0 of 4 2.5" HDD for a long time before converting to 2.5" Ultrastar's (mounted in a drive cage). Sandy Bridge was a hell of a processor.
Iam still whit my 900D cant find any replacement worth it
Its not like a pc case ages so no reason to switch unless you have to
8:08 The full-black setup with the central white LEDs on the end of the GPU looks incredible
Finally, I've had my 1000D for about 5 years now and have been looking forward to a new version, especially as an excuse to start a new build and use link fans, wiring up 32 ML120's using the old commander pro and rgb hub method was painful
Looking forward to that coverage at EK booth Steve!
that 9000d made an atx board look like a micro atx
lol at the first glance of it, I thought it was a strangely tiny board for such a large case. Then I realized how large the case actually was.
Yet anotheg solid video from Steve and the Nexus crew. I love eatching you discuss the engineering behind everything. I've learned a ton from your channel and even more from your coverage of Computex 2024!
Finally found a case that can replace my 1000d and I’m extremely excited about it
On the 9000D the panel that sandwiches the French doors blocks the airflow from the perforations of the doors, which I really like (the doors not the airflow).
Gonna say, after working conventions: that Airborne stuff (or the local shop's knock off) helped me beat the con crud once I dove into it. Take it before and during.
stahp yelling you deaf ...you guys are the best, thanks GN o/
Imagine the cost of replacing those with noctuas 😅
I think with 32 fans... Any choice will be costly... I'm embarrassed by how much I've spent on fans for my 1000D.
@@jtreedy116 Checkout Thermalright fans, they're incredible value. 3 sets of 120mm fans cost ~$15-20 for the RGB and non-RGB.
If you can spend 500 bones on a case you probably won't care too much :P
$30 x 32 fans = $960. Enough to buy a decent PC all by itself
most corsair rgb fans cost around the same as noctua ones, if not more
As a 1000D owner I am disappointed with the 9000D. I don't see a lot of differences in size, mostly seems to be cosmetic. I bet you the rear fans won't allow for dual 140mm and the gap between the top and front radiator / fan mounting will also be tiny. It will be nice to see if I can install the 9000D top usb hub on my case, hopefully they were able to put everything into a single cable (I have 4 - 2 for usb 3.0 and 2 for usb c. I had to buy a pcie adapter for the extra connector as almost no motherboards have 2x usb c headers). Not using glass for the front is nice though.
GN’s content output at this event is insane. Hard work not going unnoticed! 💪🏽
The double wide fans reminds me of the side of my old Rosewill Thor V2, you could have four 120s, or a single 230, however that case felt flimsy, and the open close vents on top came broken on 1 out of 2 of them for me.
Dual system cases are cool. I built a NAS/gaming PC in the Phanteks one a few years back. Significantly higher Spouse Approval Factor than having two boxes in a 1 bedroom apartment lol
The shape is called a tricorn. Back to you, Steve.
Did you notice the French Doors are exactly the same, just one is mounted upside down, obviously to save costs, but it has the same small hole for the PSU.
When I learnt basic motor design many many years ago - something I haven't touched upon since aside from the handful of occasions that I needed to deal with motors, like the one time I was looking at a lathe - I've always learnt it from a 3-phase perspective (Phase coils A, B and C spaced 120 degrees apart). During that time I was looking at the lathe, I remember the main takeway was that single phase is doable, but 3-phase is smoother. The only thing that stops you doing 3-phase is it's more complex - and I wonder if there are additional points of failure in terms of electronics. Cost is another concern I suppose, so I wonder how these Titan coolers compare to the old ones price-wise.
There might be 32 fans in that PC case….
But I’m still your biggest fan Steve ❤😂
9000D is a pretty insane case. Don't think I'd have a use for much of its intended purposes, but I do love large cases because of how much easier they are to work with when you have large components. 7000D is looking pretty appealing for my next major PC upgrade since I've reached the space limit of my current case(newer GPUs and CPU coolers won't fit in it since it's a very old case too narrow for modern hardware without excessive modification.
lol the cuts to the pump face swaps as cumbersome had me laughing
Man I love that 9000D. How many bedrooms does it have?
Hahaha - made me laugh
I'm so glad you decided to not say LGA1851 or Z890 in your videos. Respecting Intel's wishes is of the utmost importance.
Yes. It would be disastrous if we knew as a result of Steve mentioning that their next socket was going to be called LGA1851 and their next high end chipset Z890 because it's such a departure from their past naming schemes, where LGA sockets contain how many pins they have and the chipset goes up by a hundred with each generation
i like the 1000d super tower case alot im glad theyre making a revised version of the same case but more modern but that still has the 2 pc in one case feature
Props to corsair for fighting the housing crysis with that big case
Case is so big, it can fit Steve in it.
New bed for Snowflake?
"How many fans do you want?"
"Yes."
I have a 1000d, was running 2 setups as a his and hers thing, absolutely love it
Id love to see a review on the 9000D because if i didnt have the 1000d, id buy it.
i miss the 900d and got hype for a minute when i saw 9000d thinking itd be more similar to the 900d than 1000d
That 9000D is sick! If only I could justify such a beast...
Every time there's a tech event I can expect Steve on the case(s)
I still really like my 1000D, I'm very impressed with the updated version! I am also not doing well financially right now, the 1000D was part of my covid build that I splurged on hard. I will just be daily driving it until it no longer suits my needs, at which point I'll look to whatever Corsair is selling then lol. Still this is a fantastic update and I'm happy for everyone who gets to build in it, because the original was and still is my favorite case of all time
edit: and for anyone wondering, I stuck 2 80mm radiators in the front, which takes up all the space a second row of fans would, so I ONLY have 11 fans in my build, since I was reusing fans from a previous build and the radiator conflicts with 2 additional front fans. I went with their white 2400rpm LL fans because they were the only 2400rpm fan corsair made, and I needed the extra RPM to overcome the lack of push/pull on an 80mm thick rad, even with the low fin density it was designed with to allow more air through. Performance is of course fantastic, and it honestly only spins up past 1400-1500rpm when I have headphones on while I'm gaming, so I never hear it thankfully. Some day I might replace those radiators with dual 4x120 60mm thick rads, and then I will be able to put the maximum 24 fans in my build (i would also have to add 3 more to the top radiator), assuming I don't also figure out a way to mount a 240mm rad to the exhaust fans, at which point I could theoretically hit 26 lmao. That would also mean the new case supports 34 max with that same kind of config, but it's still wild af regardless. that many fans would cost more than some cheap PCs lmao
Wild that the sum of those radiators is about the size of a car radiator
I hope your spirits are buoyed knowing you are sort of at the center of the world today and doing amazing reporting.
Getting sick from exposure and fatigue is irritating so rest when you can and see you after this marathon. Time off for all for recovery!
4:17 I'd say that's a triweave pattern. Something that has been used for a long time in stamped leather. Though apparently it is also somehow actually possible to weave, though even looking at diagrams, I don't understand it lol.
I want that 9000D so badly in white !! 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
. And here I was thinking I was going a little overboard with a thermaltake core p8.
That bugger weighs 50 lb without anything in it, and it takes 18 fans. Idea.
That thing literally takes twice the number of fans.... Dear God, I kind of want one 🙂
Hahhaha, I love Steve running into Roman.
Loving the 9000D. It's like two cases fused together. I always been interested in having a streaming pc but having two separate cases is annoying.
E.Engineering interpretation: so it's a brushless DC motor (typical) using field-orientated control (new standard) which doesnt require hall-effect sensors for speed control or relative positioning (which phase should be turned on next/when)
What would be nice is if they had the Elite Capellix style pump head lighting as an option for those AIOs so you can use third-party plates like V1 Tech makes.
Need to do a single itx system in that 9000D. It should also be on the bottom for maximum effect.
I should do a computex GamersNexus marathon ;)
Lovely Video as always Steve.
I have to admit that German pronauciation was really good.
Greeting from Germany have a good time and I hope you find more to make my inner nerd smile ;)
4:20 its just a different traditional Japanese pattern. Triforce is also a well known Japanese symbol called "uroko"
Finally.. I can upgrade my 1000D!
On the 9000D, while the PSU has that mesh on the PSU air intake, isn’t it right up against a solid panel when you close it up anyway?
when will this 9000D be for sale? this is definitely gonna be my next case :)
cant wait for the Corsair 9000D,
I WANT THIS CASE Corsair
Cool stuff Steve. Thanks.
The half holes for the PSU then slightly get blocked by the actual main side door??
1:21 At least it helps overcoming the mumbling. Never have I ever had to put less energy in understanding Steve.
5:11 I almost get a heart attack from watching this
And I don't understand what's that for
@@IIARROWS It shutdown automatically because it was overheating. This looks REALLY bad on corsairs part.
The case fans stayed on, but the motherboard/usb hub fans all terminated with the crash.
@@paulmiddleton7168 No... how can you say that? Beside, if you look not all fans shut down. Maybe one connector wasn't well connected and Steve moving the case and cable caused a temporary disconnection.
Beside, a system can reboot even without overheating.
And those system, if really on, they are idle. If not just stuck at boot with no OS installed at all.
They are not doing any work to overheat.
Yeah, my volume was very high and was not expecting that!
are we ignoring @6:00 where you show the vents in the french door for the PSU but not noticing the fact that there is a solid piece of sheet metal right on top of it when the rear side panel is closed??
An interesting solution for the 3500X's bottom shroud could be to ship reversed flow PSUs that pulls air from the back and exhaust inside the case. This way you could point it upward and send (mostly) cool air to the GPU.
Man, I just got the 7000d for the front io. That extra USB C is juicy, and I wish I had it.
I doubt I will ever be at a point where its reasonable for me to need a dual pc system let alone a $500 case for it, but if I do the 9000D looks pretty cool xD
As a moron who fell in love with the 1000D, and will be getting a 9000D - is it reasonable? Of course not! But lord is it beautiful.
@@jtreedy116 Fair, I would honestly be lying if I said I wouldn't consider getting it if I had $500 to drop on a case even without having any reasonable use/need for it lol
Some ask “why?” Cultured people ask “why not?”
It needs 10 more fans to reach the correct number
hold on, on the 9000D, i am more worried about the PSU fan behind the french doors being blocked by the large outer door than not having the holes for the full fan as mentioned, since behind those holes is the outer door... Timestamp as 6:00,
Am i missing something here? The large door opened at 5:08 covers what little ventilation that PSU has, what is being discussed at 6:00.
I really want to get a parts list for that 9000D because that system looks SICK. if anyone can get a parts list for *everything* included that would be amazing!
So great this lion back in his natural habitat. Heart warming.
I'm really curious about the 3 phase and how they are doing it. Typically in smaller stuff they would align the electromagnets 90 degrees apart. I'm almost guessing they are cheaping out and just saying 3 phase. In larger pumps the motors can actually have 3 phases of power.
I am certain they could do this with circuits, create several square wave generators from the original dc in. However with adding more hardware also adds more points of failure.
In short, I'd really love to see a channel take the pump apart and see how it's wired. Then also run testing on it out actually affects the flow, or if it is just a reliability thing and was it worth it to go to that type of motor?
Thanks steve
Wow what a beast of a machine, 32 fans,like omg.
Is it possible to put parts from the 9000D in the 1000D? Those adjustable fan sliders and the front panel look amazing.
We need to fit more fans in a case
Corsair : say no more
A possible reason for this trend:
CORSAIR is making alot of $ with selling their RGB fans
"Je mehr du khaust" "desto mehr ???????", der8auer definitely said something else there
I've almost always used full size towers for building computers since around '97. My first full size, at 14yo, was a server donated to my high school computer troubleshooting class from Intel.
The teacher had never used a computer before in his life, so I thought the class and so I was allowed to have free reign to any of the hardware.
I got my knowledge from my father who had been building and troubleshooting since his navy days and ran his own business building and troubleshooting for companies in the Northwest until he joined Intel, in the southwest.
An aside of the PSU intake on the 9000000D; yes, it's got some intake on those french doors, but if I'm not mistaken, all of it gets cut off by the main back panel?
The PSU cooling is a big oversight imo. While there are holes on the small doors... when you close the big panel you block them anyways?
5:50 what good are those ventilation holes if there is a large solid side panel on top of it anyway?
Need a build video of that case with the 30 fans, seems quite interesting
Really wanting to see the review on the 3500x
That 9000D case with the full custom loop and 4 pumps lol - I can tell you now it require at least two people to pickup and weighs a 120 pounds. I don't understand why anyone wants a PC that anytime you want to work on it requires help moving it
That's super close to the number they gave us! They said it's about 60 kg built!
@@GamersNexus wouldn't want to put that on my desk lol
I agree it's gotta be so heavy, but I think it's a pretty sweet idea for a streaming PC that can run two PCs inside one case. If I was a streamer I'd definitely go that route instead of having two cases next to each other.
@@quek9848 Imagine someone put it on the desk and the desk is flipping over;D
My 1000D surely weighs a ton with 2 480s and 2 360s and two pumps (and yes, I have 32 fans in it). I get it, it's a monster, some of us are marks for this thing. I can't wait to get my hands on a 9000D and do this all over again. Because I'm nuts.
that half perforated case door in the case seems it won't do anything as then it will be covered by the outside panel