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ABS Canyon 695--Build And Installation

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Build, Continued

Pop off one of the side panels and you’ll immediately see the thought process that went into designing the Canyon. Divided into three sections, the chassis attempts to isolate the power supply, the motherboard, and storage. Cooling in the power supply chamber is limited to the PSU’s own fan. The main chamber has three 140 mm fans blowing through it. And the lowest chamber is cooled by one 140 mm blower and two 80 mm coolers.

Sitting in my Aeron at full height, I could rest an elbow on the top of the Canyon. So, the power and reset buttons located on top of the case are actually conveniently located, as is the little metal door hiding USB, FireWire, eSATA, and audio connectivity. Not conveniently located, however, is the case’s fan controller switch sitting behind the aluminum front panel and under the fan filter. Hopefully you aren’t going to be changing fan speeds very often.

Overall, the build quality of ABS’ Canyon is great. It’s a work of art, crafted from aluminum. My only complaint is that the acoustic material applied to the chassis doors was applied in such a way as to cause bubbling, similar to what you’d see from an inexpensive auto tint job.

Installation

After spending $600 on a chassis, you probably want to bask in the building process, which is good since, despite its size, the Canyon isn’t exactly an easy case to work inside.

The hard drive backplane idea is an interesting one, but it limits capacity to standard 3.5” SATA drives. I’ve already seen a handful of complaints about VelociRaptors not working, though I don’t have any here to verify. Our Seagate and Samsung drives slid right in, but you still wind up attaching power and data cables to the backplane.

As you can see, the power supply installs in the chamber above your motherboard. Though the Canyon is incredibly tall, it isn’t particularly deep. So, the 1 kW PC Power and Cooling PSU you’ll see in some of our other builds isn’t an option here—it runs right into the external drive bays. Even with Cooler Master’s smaller UCP 1100W installed, routing leads through the narrow gaps between each of the case’s levels is a task. Cable management is less an option here and more of a necessity.

Fortunately, massive dimensions work in the Canyon’s favor at least once. An eighth expansion slot and ample room at the bottom of the motherboard chamber mean a third double-wide graphics card will fit in our Asus Rampage II Extreme, hanging off the end of the board.

It’s also worth noting that this is another case just begging for a water cooling setup. There’s no reservoir fill hole like you’d find on the Cooler Master case, but there is plenty of room up top and four cutouts for hoses. More so than Cooler Master’s HAF, though, the ABS chassis is compartmentalized, sealed off, and insulated, suggesting that it’ll make a quieter candidate for air cooling.

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PT88 15/12/2008 12:24
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WAOW, does britian use the Dollar now!!!!!

Anonymous 15/12/2008 12:56
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Come on Tom's Hardware get an f*ing grip! This has been going on too long.

spuddyt 15/12/2008 16:44
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although it wont be long before they are similar in worth :p

Guardsmon 18/12/2008 18:53
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", I got my first peek at the ABS chassis—otherwise known as Lian Li’s PC-X2000" - The UK isn't in the USA so like the rest of the world we know the company as Lian Li.
You said yourself that it is actually a Lian li, so why call it by the retailers name anyway?

MartinS 20/12/2008 03:24
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I always felt a bit proud, that one of the leading tech sites on the web was European, but since the "merger" with Best of Media this site has gone downhill at an alarming rate.

As Guardsmon says: USA = ~260 million people, Rest of the world ~6,5 billion people.

Furthermore, i visit the UK site to avoid thing like "aluminum". I always knew Americans were a bit careless, but to lose the "i" in Aluminium always ticks me off. The main reason being the fact there is no such thing like f*cking Aluminum!!

I can understand the whole metric/imperial thing. Put the one used least between brackets (i.e 25,4cm (10")) If you write an article solely intentioned for the US part of THG, use all sorts of none exiting materials and dimensions you like, but when you write for the International site: USE INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS FOR CRYIN' OUT LOUD!!!!

Get your act together again and return to being the leading international site tech you once were. Fire the American twats or get them to learn proper English and give them all al copy of both the Periodic Table and a metric - Imperial conversion book.

zsolmanz 26/09/2009 01:07
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Lol - outrage.

I'm a latecomer, so I've always wondered why this site (although .co.uk) has $ not £.
As for conversion books, aren't there on-line programs that do that now too? There's really no excuse.

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