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AU EditionYou are located: Home > Reviews > Cases, Cooling & PSU > AZZA Fusion 3000 Full-Tower Chassis Review

AZZA Fusion 3000 Full-Tower Chassis Review

By: (more) | Cases, Cooling & PSU Content | Posted: Feb 16, 2012 3:57 am
Click to search for the price of this item!Comment | Print | Email | Font Size: AA
Our Rating: 87% | Manufacturer: AZZA

Introduction

 

azza_fusion_3000_full_tower_chassis_review

 

The last three years working for TweakTown have been a blast. I get to see literally tons of equipment and I see innovations of every sort making it into chassis design and development over this time period. I have seen cases come from the basic steel box that just "holds the components" and on the flip side of that coin, I have seen some really well laid-out and fully equipped chassis, too.

 

What we are about to be discussing takes a hard look at the interior of the chassis as well as coming up with a pleasing exterior for the latest submission takes gaming chassis into the workstation end of the spectrum to deliver a chassis unlike most of the submissions I receive.

 

On the outside our latest submission has a large and chunky presence. It starts with the large feet and is taken up the front and onto the top giving you a chassis reminiscent of something along the lines of the CM HAF cases, yet different enough to set this AZZA chassis apart if they were next to each other. On the inside things are taken to a whole new level in any gaming chassis I have seen. I have done a few server chassis reviews and even there I have not seen the amount of back planes for hard drive bays. I mean seriously, between the 2.5" and 3.5" bays, there are ten hot swap bays to play with here! On top of that, the only other thing inside the chassis I needed a tool for was the risers and motherboard screws. The rest is completely tool-less or uses thumbscrews.

 

This chassis I have been describing is the Fusion 3000 from AZZA. While I have hit on some interesting points already, those were just enough to peek your interest and are really just the tip of the iceberg as far as what this chassis offers both inside and out.

 

I don't want to give it all away up front, or if gives you no reason to continue reading the rest of the review. I assure you it is worth your time to have a look at the latest full tower chassis submission from AZZA, as it seems they really thought this one out in every aspect and are ready to deliver a chassis I can see a lot of people using now and growing into later.


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