facebook rss twitter

Lian Li announces PC-A70F/71F full-tower chassis

by Parm Mann on 6 August 2009, 12:58

Tags: PC-A70F, PC-A71F, Lian Li

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qatf4

Add to My Vault: x

If a mid-tower chassis just won't do, you'll be pleased to hear that Lian Li has today launched two new full-tower options in the form of the PC-A70F (below, left) and PC-A71F (below, right). There isn't a whole lot to choose between the two, with the latter differentiating itself with a sleek front-facing door.

Measuring 220mm x 590mm x 585mm (W, H, D, depth 615mm with door), the chassis are almost as large as the Corsair Obsidian 800D. Weighing over 8kg, they're true heavyweight solutions, too.

Lian Li's making use of a minimalistic all-black hairline-brushed aluminium finish, and there's a tool-free approach throughout. Users will find a tool-less clasp for the PSU, tool-less brackets for the 10 internal 3.5in drive bays, tool-less clips for all seven expansion slots and tool-less mounts for up to five 5.35in optical drives.

There's clearly plenty of room to work with, and each chassis offers support for E-ATX, M-ATX and ATX motherboards. As you'd expect from Lian Li, there are plenty of nice touches - including anti-vibration rubber grommets scattered throughout the chassis to reduce noise, a cutout in the motherboard tray to aid CPU cooler installation, a top-mounted I/O panel (with audio, USB, FireWire and eSATA ports), a bottom-mounted cable-management clamp, vented PCI slots, pre-drilled holes for liquid cooling kits, filters on both front-mounted intake fans and...well, you get the idea.

Speaking of fans, Lian Li's chassis feature two 140mm intakes at the front and two 120mm exhausts at the rear.

We're told both chassis will appear later this month, with Lian Li's suggested retail price at $229+VAT for the PC-A70F and $259+VAT for the PC-A71F. That puts the latter firmly into Corsair Obsidian 800D territory.



HEXUS Forums :: 14 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
looks like fantastic build quality but a little bland. It would make a fantasitc file share server though!
Looks nice i must say. I always take issue with the options for fans in lian li cases though. Seems to be pretty limited.
The thing I don't like with new Lian Li cases is the way they are putting buttons on the top of the case rather than the front, and to a lesser extent air vents. I have cats they like nice warm places, walking across the top my my computers is a favorite hobby of theirs. The last thing I need is power/reset buttons they can step on, not to mention fun cables they can chew and pull.
Looks like a lovely case!

I can't help but feel somewhat dirty for wanting it black on the inside, too (especially as I don't like windowed side panels!).

As ever, I'm very keen to hear (pun intended) how quiet this case is.

Roo
Biscuit
Looks nice i must say. I always take issue with the options for fans in lian li cases though. Seems to be pretty limited.

I've gone through a good few premium cases over the years, including several Lian Li cases, Coolermaster, and now a Zalman. Never once bought one because of the fans that came supplied - always expected to replace them.

oolon
The thing I don't like with new Lian Li cases is the way they are putting buttons on the top of the case rather than the front, and to a lesser extent air vents. I have cats they like nice warm places, walking across the top my my computers is a favorite hobby of theirs. The last thing I need is power/reset buttons they can step on, not to mention fun cables they can chew and pull.

Horses for courses - there's obviously a market for that option else it wouldn't exist. I don't have a pet issue but what I use as a cooling solution needs to go somewhere, and that just happens to be above my case. Buttons and ports on top wouldn't be practical for me. Can't think an instance where it ever would have been for me either.