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Rosewill - Nighthawk 117 Atx Full Tower Case Quality Reviews

Our Verdict

Naysayers from the circle of big-liquid fanatics will be the Nighthawk 117'southward biggest challenge in the enthusiast market, followed past those who don't like lights and those who don't like windows. But if yous're looking for the widest assortment of well-priced features in a mid-sized full tower that has both lights and a side window, the Nighthawk 117 appears to be an unbeatable value.

For

  • 6 USB ports
  • Eight drive cages
  • Three forepart trophy
  • Meridian-loading drive dock
  • A full listing of traditional features

Against

  • Room for just 1 long radiator, at 2x140mm or 2x120mm

Tom's Hardware Verdict

Naysayers from the circle of large-liquid fanatics will be the Nighthawk 117's biggest claiming in the enthusiast market place, followed by those who don't similar lights and those who don't like windows. Just if y'all're looking for the widest array of well-priced features in a mid-sized full belfry that has both lights and a side window, the Nighthawk 117 appears to exist an unbeatable value.

Pros

  • +

    Six USB ports

  • +

    Eight bulldoze cages

  • +

    3 front bays

  • +

    Top-loading drive dock

  • +

    A total list of traditional features

Cons

  • -

    Room for merely i long radiator, at 2x140mm or 2x120mm

Specifications, Interior And Exterior

The split between liquid-cooling and traditional ability user cases has never been starker, as liquid-cooling fanatics scramble for emptied-out boxes. Those builders frequently get to extremes in their assessments, implying that the retention of a single forepart-console bay to concur an Asus OC Console is an affront to the entire enthusiast customs. Nothing (emptiness) has never been then popular! Traditional bay-heavy designs rebel against a neo-enthusiast PC marketplace where trendiness defines conformity. Replete with three external bays and eight (removable) drive trays, Rosewill's Nighthawk 117 is the latest provocateur.

Ten expansion slots can also be seen through the side window, which is the biggest development I've seen in cases since 2008. That's when Ultra ATX was proposed. Withal when we combine the elevation of Ultra ATX with the depth of EATX, we end up with a case that tin can hold virtually any enthusiast-market motherboard brusk of EVGA's HPTX models. Those who need room for HPTX in improver to drive trophy will exist looking for a much larger case.

Those 10 expansion slots are really the merely thing that pushes the Nighthawk 117 into total-belfry territory, and and so just barely at 23.three" tall and 22.five" deep. Superlative-panel radiator space and the row of four line-passage grommets backside that infinite nonetheless.

Just when y'all idea the entire Nighthawk 117 was stuck in 2008, nosotros turn to the top console and find two USB 3.0 ports. That brings the pattern up to at least a belatedly 2010 characteristic set. There's also a dual-format (two.5" and iii.5") hard drive dock dating from around the same period, two three-speed fan control switches, four USB 2.0 ports, headset jacks, a slide that opens top-panel louvers, a power LED and, in a day where other companies are eliminating it, a hard drive activity LED. What an extraordinary range of conventional features!

Specifications

Interior And Outside

The Nighthawk 117'due south power supply intake vent features a dust filter that slides out from under its lower, rear border.

You lot'll accept to pull off the confront panel to remove the front-panel dust filter, which is built into a spiral-on fan panel. The Nighthawk 117 lacks room for the stop caps of front-mounted dual-140mm radiators, simply builders who don't mind sacrificing hard drive cages will find room for a dual-120mm radiator by using culling screw holes on the same mounting panel.

A fourth (hidden) 5.25" bay is also exposed by removing the face console. We're not sure what nosotros'd apply that space for, other than maybe a pair of 3.v" hard drive adapter brackets

The top panel appears far more interesting, as it is drilled for both central and offset mounting of both 140mm and 120mm fans. The commencement mounts are provided for boosted motherboard clearence when using thick radiators.

Rosewill equips the Nighthawk 117 with enough space behind the motherboard for the main ATX cable and even some cablevision crossing, leaving enough room after installation to stuff a few unused cables. Grommets dress cable passages, except those at the motherboard tray's height edge.

Builders who need extra card infinite will find that the middle difficult drive cage slides out afterwards removing two thumb screws, and that the lower bulldoze muzzle can be pulled out afterward removing a few Phillips-head screws. In that location isn't plenty room above and below the 140mm fans for the end caps of a radiator, just those same mounts make radiators an option at 2x120mm.

Hard drive trays secure 3.5" drives using integrated side pins and/or lesser screws, simply ii.v" drives are secured merely past screws. Either method is slightly less convenient than the v.25" bays, which accept slide latches to undo locator pins.

Each fan controller uses the ability connector of a 4-pivot ATA drive, and outputs that power to iii 3-pivot fan connectors. The Nighthawk 117'south front fans have both three-pivot fan and 4-pivot ATA manner connectors, leaving builders to choose the 1 they prefer. Using the fan's iv-pin connector defeats the function of the case'southward fan controller.

Other cables include drive dock data (SATA) and power (iv-pin), plus interfaces for Hd-Sound, USB iii.0, and two USB ii.0 motherboard headers.

The Nighthawk 117 includes a bag of screws, standoffs and cablevision ties. Also within that bag is a nut driver to #2 Phillips-head screwdriver adapter, to ease collision installation.

The Nighthawk 117 has cablevision passages spaced for ATX and Xl-ATX motherboards, including those roughly x.vi"-deep by 12"-high models that have been oddly-misnamed EATX. True 13"-deep EATX boards also fit, only without the convenience of cablevision passages along the tray's front end border.

The finished Nighthawk 117 has the traditional appearance of a high-end gaming case.

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Thomas Soderstrom is a Senior Staff Editor at Tom's Hardware US. He tests and reviews cases, cooling, memory and motherboards.

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Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/rosewill-nighthawk-117-eatx-xlatx-ultraatx-full-tower-case,4482.html