facebook rss twitter

Corsair Obsidian Series 650D chassis review

by Parm Mann on 21 April 2011, 08:50 4.5

Tags: Corsair

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qa5np

Add to My Vault: x

Final thoughts and rating

Corsair's Obsidian Series 650D is an unusual chassis in that it's largely a Graphite 600T dressed up to provide the Obsidian aesthetics that many have come to love.

It's a simple formula, but by throwing in a sprinkling of upgrades, Corsair has cooked up an excellent mid-tower solution that fulfills the needs of most enthusiast users.

Despite being the smallest Obsidian Series chassis to date, the 650D has ample room to house a seriously high-end PC, cooling is well catered for through three pre-bundled fans and there's adequate room to install elaborate liquid coolers. Couple that with more cable routing options than you're ever likely to need, a hot-swappable SATA bay, integrated fan control and first-class build quality, and you're left with an impressive overall package.

Trouble is, Corsair now has two excellent mid-tower chassis in its range, and choosing between the similarly-priced Graphite 600T and Obsidian 650D isn't as clear cut as you'd think. Sure, the latter offers a few additional features, improved cooling performance and all those clean Obsidian lines, but the former has sumptuous curves, lower noise levels and is now available in special edition white.

Bottom line: the Obsidian Series 650D's spacious interior, solid build quality and abundance of features make it one of the very best mid-tower chassis on the market.

The Good

Delivers Obsidian Series elegance in a smaller, tidier package
Still has ample room for ultra-high-end configurations
Integrated hot-swap SATA bay as standard
Decent cooling performance
A joy to work with

The Bad

Pricey for a mid-tower solution
Fans can become noisy

HEXUS Rating

4.5/5
Corsair Obsidian Series 650D

HEXUS Awards


Corsair Obsidian Series 650D

HEXUS Where2Buy

The Corsair Obsidian Series 650D 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@HEXUSforum.



HEXUS Forums :: 10 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
A great shame about the noise. I have a 700D and it's pretty noisey out of the box (IMO).

It looks like the same drive mounting mechanism, I have found this to be very poor on the 700D, transmitting vibration from the drives to the case which can act as a resonating box. I ended up replacing them all with silicone mounts I had to make myself, a vast improvement. It's a shame Corsair haven't taken the time to sort out these issues.

Still, minor or none issues depending on whether case noise is something you care about. I have no doubt the case will be excellent in all other regards. For me though, the noise and lack of a “no window” option rule out this case.
Looks a beautiful case the cable management and layout would make a new-build an absolute breeze - personally I will wait until corsair (or somebody else) release a case with usb3.0 header support on the front IO …:rockon:

One more thing to note is that the new white 600T also has the same fans as this which run @1,000 rpm max.:secret:
davidcrofter
… personally I will wait until corsair (or somebody else) release a case with usb3.0 header support on the front IO …:rockon:
:

The 600T has 1 USB3 header already.
Originally Posted by davidcrofter View Post

… personally I will wait until corsair (or somebody else) release a case with usb3.0 header support on the front IO …
ehhhhhhh
The 600T has 1 USB3 header already.

and the 650D has two USB 3.0:surprised:
Yes they have USB3.0 ports at the front but it has to be routed through the case to the IO shield at the back of the case. What I mean is an internal USB3.0 header cable that connects directly to the motherboard.

I think the new Coolermaster Enforcer is the only one available at present:
http://www.coolermaster.co.uk/product.php?product_id=6715