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Antec
Take 4 Studio Series Rackmount Case Review
There are many server configurations these
days, whether you are building file servers, network appliances,
firewalls or the new HTPC or studio servers. Antec releases their new
Studio Series server chassis. In the past Antec has stood for quality
and innovation without equal, lets take a look and see how they did with
the Take 4 Studio Series 4U chassis. Guest reviewer Jim brings us
the scoop!

Looking at the front of the case,
the appearance is functional elegance. The key lock is sturdy and two
LED's are visible, power and disk activity.

Opening up the front cover reveals
an abundance of drive bays, a pair of USB ports and a Firewire port.
This chassis is targeted at the recording studio market. With that in
mind, this server has a lot to offer. Tons of drive bays makes the
chassis suitable for audio or video files. Using the four 3.5" internal
drive bays on the right you could support over a Terabyte of data,
without breaking the bank. The two external bays in the center for
either floppy drives or card readers. Rounding it all out are the two
full size 5.25" drive bays for your DVD, high end audio mixer or Tape
backup drives. The one thing that could be conspicuously overlooked is
the massive vent under the 5.25" drive bays. It's a dedicated vent for
the power supply, talk about cooling!

Looking at the case from the right
side shows a 120mm fan pre-installed. Nothing says cooling and quiet
like 120mm!

From the back you see the other
92mm fan as well as the power supply and motherboard openings. Once
again, instead of using a 80mm, Antec uses the 92mm for that little
extra airflow that separates a good chassis from a great one. Rounding
this out is the two quality black anodized thumb screws holding the lid
on. This is one thing other cases scrimp on that Antec splurged. The
thumb screws have nice big heads on them so they are easy to turn. When
a company pays attention to the little details, you know you have a
quality product.

Opening up the lid we see cavernous
opening inside. The support rod is solid and easy to remove and
install. The 4u form factor makes it a breeze to use the newer monster
sized, but ultra quiet CPU heat sinks. The one difference between this
case and a true "server" case is the depth. This chassis is set up for
standard ATX sized boards, not the monsters with quad CPU and onboard
SCSI raid controllers etc.

Looking closer at the included
power supply is a Antec Smart Power 450, plenty of power for lots of
devices! The connectors include a combination 20 or 24 pin motherboard
connector as well as SATA and Molex connectors aplenty. There is even a
lead from the power supply to plug into the board so you can monitor the
fan speed.

Remember that vent we noticed on
the front? This is a dedicated cooling vent just for the power supply,
providing a cool breath of fresh air. This combined with the smart
power PS equals truly silent operation. Servers I have built in the
past belong in a server rack because they sounded like a 747 taxing on
the runway. This unit is quiet enough to use in many different
applications and even comes with rubber pads to dampen the vibration
from the disk drives if it is not held in a rack.

Taking a little closer look at the
Tri Cool fans shows some serious air flow capacity. The little white
switches are for each fan and come with a low, medium and high speed
setting. Once again showing the versatility of the design of this
case. In a rackmount cabinet you can turn the fans to high for maximum
airflow and cooling. At home as a HTPC or in the recording studio, set
the fans to medium or low for ultra quiet operation.
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