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Review: The Thermaltake V9 SATA Toaster Case

V9 Case Top Dock.jpg

After I fried my 2009-era Antec quad core tower machine, I had my favorite local box shop put me together a new quad core, this time in an interesting case: the Thermaltake V9 BlacX. Like virtually all cases you buy on the parts market these days, it’s a gamer case, complete with lots of fans and the obligatory plexi window on the side so (I presume) your friends can admire your junk. The fans are there to cool ranks of screaming graphics cards. If you’re using integrated graphics, as I am, you can probably turn most of them off. With just the front panel fan going, the inside of the case here runs at 75-77 degrees F (I measured it with a Radio Shack probe digital thermometer) which is hardly molten death.

I bought the V9 for a very particular reason: It has a double SATA toaster dock built right into the top panel. I’ve been using an Ineo USB toaster dock for some time, and like it a great deal. As with any gadget of its class, it needs its own wall wart, and there’s the inevitable data cable. The notion of having a toaster dock like that right on the machine means that I can lose a wall wart and a data cable from the ratsnest. The V9 case provides two.

The Gigabyte mobo I’m using has six SATA ports. Four of them are SATA 2.0 ports, capable of data transfer rates up to 3 Gbps, and two are SATA 3.0 ports, which can go as fast as 6 Gbps. (The choke point is most likely the drives you’re using, not the ports themselves.) The two 6 Gbs ports go to the internal drives. Two of the 3 Gbps ports go to the twin toaster docks on the top panel. Another 3 Gbps port goes to the optical drive. That still leaves me with a spare SATA 2.0 port, and the V9 even leaves me an empty bay in the front panel if I ever want to put a second sled slot in it.

Each of the two docks are almost identical to the Ineo dock, in that they can accept either 2.5″ SATA laptop drives or standard 3.5″ SATA drives. The dock ports do not use USB connectivity, as I initially suspected. There is no electrical or logical difference between drives plugged into the top dock ports and drives mounted internally and connected to SATA ports of similar speed.

SATA drives are hot-swappable, which means that yanking them out of a SATA connector with power on will not physically damage them. However, the OS needs to manage removability, and I haven’t poked at that aspect yet. From what I’ve read, there is a TreatAsInternalPort registry key governing whether a given SATA channel is removable or not. I believe that making a SATA port removable cuts down its throughput some. (Further research may be needed.) For the moment I’m happy to plug drives into the dock while powered down. When XP boots up, it sees them as though they were internal drives, which (electrically) they are. I’ll play around with the removability bit as time allows.

The case is too new to judge, really. I have a quiet Antec power supply in it, and the front fan makes barely a whisper. It has all the external ports I need. Key here isn’t functionality so much as survival in daily use. The Antec 900’s USB ports started to die after only a year or so in service. Check with me again after the V9 has lived for three or four years in my new downstairs office with the Wimhurst carpeting. USB ports may be the least of my worries.

So far: highly recommended.

7 Comments

  1. Tom R. says:

    That looks like a really cool case Jeff! I also saw that there appears to be some other ports on the top surface including one for headphones. That would be very nice if you have the case on the floor or down low. With all those fans you might need the headphones!

    One question on the MOBO is it Bios or UEFI and if the latter did you get the key so you can install or reinstall an OS? This issue really has me concerned and I just read today that Red Hat is paying Microsoft to permit RHL on Microsoft Certified Windows 8 machines. This does NOT sound like anything I want to touch.

    1. The top surface ports are (L-R) USB 2.0, headphones, mic, USB 3.0.

      The mobo is nothing aggressive: Gigabyte Z68A-D3H-B3 with LGA1155 socket. BIOS fersure; I simply will not use UEFI, nor sheesh almighty, Windows 8. CPU is a Core i5-2400 running at 3.1 GHz. 8 GB of RAM. (That’s for the benefit of Linux; I know XP won’t use more and 3.5 GB of it.)

      The custom-box gang will never go for EUFI, which is a thinly-veiled effort to eliminate Windows piracy by controlling what OS may be installed on a UEFI box. You (or anyone else with a lick of sense) really don’t want to touch it. As with so much else from MS these days, there is nothing in it for the end user.

      1. Tom R. says:

        Jeff, I couldn’t agree with you more on UEFI and EUFI but my fear is that Bios boards will disappear. It looks like that is beginning to happen already. Of course, all it would take is a few Congrescritters to mandate a move to UEFI as a way to lock down all computers either from the security theater of a cyber terrorist threat or more likely from large donations from big media. Then the era of the PERSONAL computer would be over.

  2. Aki says:

    The self-stabilising oil-pressure bearing – should be silent, but sounds exotic to me.

    http://www.noctua.at/main.php?show=sso_bearing&lng=en

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