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Lian Li launches PC-B25F mid-tower chassis

by Parm Mann on 27 August 2009, 16:21

Tags: PC-B25F, Lian Li

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qatp2

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It isn't easy keeping track of Lian Li's chassis revisions, and its unimaginative alphanumeric product names don't exactly help.

Take for example the PC-B25F, a mid-tower chassis launched today as a successor to 2007's PC-B25. Given the understated name, one could assume the chassis is little more than a tweaked version of an existing solution. Though that's true to a certain extent, the PC-B25F is packed full of numerous refinements and it's looking better than ever.

The chassis retains its "Blue Ring" power light, but it loses the front-facing door found on its predecessor. What we're left with is a chassis that somewhat resembles Cooler Master's HAF 922, only without the gaudy gamer finish. Lian Li reckons the PC-B25F is ideal for the "discerning consumer", and we reckon it has a point - it's a very smooth design.

New to the chassis is a completely tool-free interior. As is the case with many of Lian Li's new offerings, the PC-B25F offers tool-free installation for the PSU, optical drives, hard drives and PCI expansion cards. As you'd expect, there's also a littering of anti-vibration rummer grommets throughout. Those who detest dust will be happy to hear the front and top panels are detachable, providing easy access to fans and filters.

Inside the 210mm x 495mm x 490mm enclosure, there's room for ATX or micro-ATX motherboards, three 5.25in drives and seven 3.5in drives (one of which is external). Eight PCI expansion slots should provide enough room for multi-GPU setups, and cooling comes courtesy of two front-mounted 120mm intakes, two top-mounted 140mm exhausts, and a rear 120mm extraction fan, too.

Being a Lian Li, the PC-B25F is finished with plenty of useful touches. Those who're willing to pay the premium for Lian Li's hand-crafted workmanship will find rounded edges, cable routing holes, a motherboard cutout to aid CPU cooler installation, and a cable management clamp. On top of the chassis you'll find a selection of I/O ports - including eSATA, HD Audio and two USB ports.

Sounds a very decent mid-tower solution, and it'll be shipping in September with an MSRP of $190 (roughly £120).



HEXUS Forums :: 16 Comments

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Does the blue ring on the front glow red if the system crashes?
Got to say this is lovely, more of a manageable size for myself, price isn't too bad either, so it would be this or the Thermaltake Level 10 for me at the moment for a personal Core i7 build coming soon, maybe mid-October.

0iD
Does the blue ring on the front glow red if the system crashes?
That would be something!
Does it have the room for extra long graphics cards?

That's the limitation of my Antec Solo… and the only reason I'm looking for a new case really!!
its very nice. Maybe my next case……
Finally a Lian Li mid tower design I can get with

I wonder how the space is at the top, usually once your mobo and big heatsink is fitted, there is very little room in mid towers