facebook rss twitter

Antec LanBoy Air modular chassis review

by Parm Mann on 16 February 2011, 16:00 2.5

Tags: Antec

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qa4ho

Add to My Vault: x

Final thoughts and rating

We wanted to love the LanBoy Air, and in some ways we still do. The eye-catching design is brilliant, the semi-modular approach is unique, and there's ample room to house plenty of high-end kit.

But given the £150 asking price, it's hard to ignore that this once-intriguing concept has evolved into a retail product riddled with flaws. The modular approach allows for certain hardware components to be moved and rotated, but there's little real-world need to do so. Yet, in providing the option, Antec is left with a confused chassis littered with literally dozens of mismatched screws and foibles that make it difficult to build into without regularly referring to the manual and built-in toolbox.

For a chassis that should be fun and interesting to work with, the LanBoy Air ultimately proves to be a tad too frustrating. A fun pet-project with limitless modding potential, perhaps, but there are functionally-better chassis available for less.

Should Antec opt to take the modular approach a step further and create Lego-like components that enable consumers to build enclosures of all shapes and sizes - with the option for mesh or solid panels and standardised screws - it might be onto something. As it stands, the LanBoy Air is an opportunity missed.

The Good

Good cooling performance
Looks different to the norm
Modular approach has potential

The Bad

Expensive for what it is
Not the easiest to build into
Becomes evidently noisy with fans at high speed
Mesh paneling offers little protection against the elements
Makes use of over 100 screws (and only 14 are thumbed)

HEXUS Rating

2.5/5
Antec LanBoy Air

HEXUS Where2Buy

The Antec LanBoy Air modular chassis is available to purchase from SCAN.co.uk*.

HEXUS Right2Reply

At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.


*As always, UK-based HEXUS.community forum members will benefit from the SCAN2HEXUS Free Shipping initiative, which will save you a further few pounds plus also top-notch, priority customer service and technical support backed up by the SCANcare@HEXUS forum.



HEXUS Forums :: 4 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
Oh dear. £150 for that shameful sellout :(
blokeinkent
Oh dear. £150 for that shameful sellout :(

Indeed, the review pretty much reflects my thoughts, it's crap and looks like a complete eyesore.
“Antec's open-air design performs well with a cool 18.1ºC ambient temperature. We don't imagine it performing quite so well in the year's hotter months.”

It'll perform no worse than any other case. I fail to see what relevance this statement has. If it's warmer outside, it goes without saying that the temperatures will increase, unless you're using a chilled cooling source…

Good concept, but not for me thanks. My first thought was “imagine how many radiators you could mount in that bad boy”, but looking at it, I don't think you'd actually fit that many. I do like the modularity, but the aesthetics just don't ring my bell…

This case is also considerably smaller than the 2 cases being compared against - they both support e-atx additionally. Is it an enthusiast case, or is it a gaming case? The name suggests gaming, but looking at the weight I'm not so sure.

Surely the case would have been better made from Ali…. The delivered product, I'm afraid, is just an expensive gimmick….
I recently bought this case for a new build, choosing it mainly for the aesthetics which although not in everyone's taste, do appeal to me.

Having now lived with it for a few weeks, while I still love the look I am still feeling disappointed at the awkward build and high cost.

The side-panel mounted fans make removing the panel a bit of a fiddle and you do get a fair bit of dust build up on the outside of the intake fans, though I live near a quarry so…

Finally, the access to the optical drive being through a side panel preserves the pleasing front view.