Javascript required
Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Carbide Series Air 740 High Airflow Atx Cube Case Review

Our Verdict

The Carbide Air 740 is an unusual find for builders who desire to mount 3 large radiators. Other buyers will want to compare its features and price to other designs before making their purchase decisions.

For

  • Powerful stock cooling
  • Supports three big radiators
  • Quick SSD mounts
  • Enough room for EATX motherboards

Confronting

  • Somewhat noisy
  • No lesser air filter
  • Flimsy right-side panel

Tom'southward Hardware Verdict

The Carbide Air 740 is an unusual find for builders who desire to mount three large radiators. Other buyers volition want to compare its features and price to other designs before making their purchase decisions.

Pros

  • +

    Powerful stock cooling

  • +

    Supports three large radiators

  • +

    Quick SSD mounts

  • +

    Enough room for EATX motherboards

Cons

  • -

    Somewhat noisy

  • -

    No bottom air filter

  • -

    Flimsy right-side panel

Introducing The Carbide Air 740

The Carbide Air 740, Corsair'southward latest semi-cubical case, builds upon the dimensions of its Carbide Air 540 to bring us room for more fans and larger radiators. The 740 model's height grows by around 4", with but a partial increase in width, making it even less of a cube than the 540 that preceded it. Office dictates form, apart from some aesthetic elements of its pare. The left-panel release latch is both functional and aesthetic.

Bars between the grills may exist considered functional since they protect the mesh from dents, but they are primarily aesthetic. The ultra-glossy acrylic window is a pure visual delight.

Front end-panel ports are located at a convenient height for both desktop and floor placement, equally long equally your chair sits low to the flooring. A mystery panel beneath the two USB three.0 ports and headset jacks hides zilch of involvement, although Corsair does add a somewhat-interesting LED switch next to the audio jacks.

Around back we find a few 80mm fan mounts—which Corsair never bothers to mention—in addition to eight expansion slots, which allows builders to place a double-slot graphics bill of fare in an ATX motherboard's bottom slot. That extra slot means the Carbide Air 740 is large enough for an 40-ATX motherboard, since it'south too deeper than ATX internally.

With 13.1" of card clearance behind the fans and a apartment motherboard tray that extends all the way to the front console, the Carbide Air 740 is, in fact, large enough internally to agree a total EATX (13" mounting depth) motherboard. Of form it doesn't take all the holes for a fourth column of standoffs, simply most of the enthusiast-class boards that receive an EATX label are far too shallow to reach that front column of standoffs. Its additional passages offer easy cablevision access with oversized motherboards installed, but the lack of an EATX label is certain to create arguments between in-the-know builders with 10.six"-deep boards and know-it-alls who contend that because of the labeling, this is non a proper EATX solution.

The Carbide Air 740 includes a pair of 140mm fans, just like its smaller 540-model sibling. It'southward added height provides room for three 120mm fans, with added space on top to make room for overlapping top-panel and front end-panel radiators. Only the front panel gets a true dust filter, with remaining fans relying only upon the case's screened mesh fan grills for dust command.

If top and front radiators aren't enough to suit your needs, some other radiator tin exist fit on the Carbide 740's lesser panel. Similar the top, it's drilled and slotted for two fans in both 140mm and 120mm sizes.

Like all of the other outer panels, the Carbide Air 740's base slides off after removing two thumb screws. Panels aren't interchangeable still, due to the case's asymmetric fan mounts.


MORE: Best Deals
MORE: Hot Bargains @PurchDeals

The Carbide Air 740's Other Half

Corsair avoids any complaints almost the space behind the motherboard tray by putting the entire ability supply back in that location, along with a couple drive racks. Power supply depth is virtually without limit, since we've never seen a PS/two-derived unit of measurement that approached the case's 14" internal depth.

A 3-drive tray behind the front panel holds three.5" drives upon silicon-damped pins and provides screw holes for installing 2.five" drives.

Iv more 2.five" drives can slide into a mountain higher up the power supply, to be secured via big plastic barbs.

A bracket along the Carbide Air 740's bottom tin provide boosted security for a power supply, although none of its positions aligned correctly with our test unit of measurement. Maybe it's designed instead effectually the dimensions of Corsair's power supplies?

The Carbide Air 740 includes several fan and radiator screws, in improver to the screws required for motherboard and bulldoze mounting.

The Carbide Air 740 skips the messy Ac-97 audio adapter in favor of a tag-free Hd Audio connection. Its power LED cable is split to support both ATX and AT-class-gene motherboards: In instance nobody got the joke, Asus reverted to legacy three-pivot spacing back when nigh cases nonetheless had AT-manner solid 3-pin ability LED connectors.

The Carbide Air 740's layout looks a little unusual, but the motherboard and power supply spiral in every bit they would in whatsoever traditional blueprint. Several inches of space environment a standard ATX motherboard.


More: Best Cases
MORE: All Instance Content
More than: In Pictures: 40 Unusual Computer Instance Mods

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

mathewenalland.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/corsair-carbide-air-740-atx-cube-mid-tower-case,4755.html