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Reviews Around The Web

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Tuesday, March 9, 2010
"I haven?t had the opportunity until now to actually have a Raidmax product in my hands. I do remember looking deeply some time ago at their cases when I bought my first case outside of an OEM built computer. At that time I passed for some reason or another, but I am here today to give Raidmax a fair unbiased shakedown, as I really have nothing to go on for build quality or feature expectations. What I do know is that most of the time, Raidmax products don?t tend to empty your wallet when purchasing their products. While Raidmax offers coolers and power supplies, I have been given a chassis from the Elite series of their chassis?. This group includes ten various chassis designs and variations within some of those ten designs as well. The chassis we are going to look at today for example is one variation of four in its design. Nothing odd here, I have seen this done by many companies, as personal tastes can vary and manufacturers try to accommodate as many as reasonably possible. Changing LED colors or having a windowed panel version is a very common practice."
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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Wednesday, September 17, 2008
The Raidmax IceCube is considered to be the mini version of the Raidmax IceBerg. The Raidmax IceCube is a SFF (Small Form Factor) case basically designed to be a LAN party case.
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Wednesday, September 10, 2008
The criteria to get on my desk are rather stringent. A case has to be sturdy. After all, it's sitting on top of a desk and is subject to gravity, especially during Battlefield 2142 sessions. It must be rather spacious inside. I trade out parts frequently and I hate cases that are stingy on the square footage. The build quality must be top notch. This goes beyond the basic toughness. A case has to look nice and be well-built which means all doors and panels are flush, the buttons work, I/O panels function, and there can be absolutely no sharp edges. My tetanus shots aren't up to date and I'm not ready for a booster. To get a case in that soon to be coveted position, a company pretty much has to showcase their ingenuity and dedication to quality.
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Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Raidmax has just launched a series of mini-tower cases targeted to the female audience, Aura, available in four unique colors: seashell pink, emerald green, polar blue and "really black". This case has five external 5.25" bays, two external 3 .5" bays and three internal 3.5" bays, coming with two 120-mm fans, one on the left side panel and the other on the rear panel, and screwless mechanisms for fastening disk drives. We reviewed the seashell pink version, check it out.
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Wednesday, July 30, 2008
The Raidmax Iceberg case is a mid range enthusiast case. It features 3 -120mm blue LED fans and 1 - 120mm black rear exhaust fan. The case sports two unique one click easy access side panels and is setup with pre-drilled holes for water cooling. This case has a lot of great features going for it along with plenty of room for your hardware.
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Monday, July 28, 2008
The Raidmax Iceberg impressed us with its sturdy and quality construction. We were definitely not expecting an aluminum case to be so strong, but the thick aluminum of the Iceberg makes it one of the strongest cases we've seen. The design of the case also makes it one of the easiest to disassemble, from the nice side panels to the easy-to-remove front panel. Cooling options provided were also very decent, with four fans out of the case.
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Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Iceberg is an all-aluminum mid-tower case from Raidmax featuring four 5 1/2" bays, four internal 3 1/2" bays and four 120-mm fans, coming with a terrific price tag of only USD 150 (a bargain for an all-aluminum case) and targeted to mainstream users. Let's take an in-depth look on this case from Raidmax.
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Friday, May 30, 2008
The Raidmax Iceberg is a sturdy case designed to suit the gamer who is also conscious of style. Coming stock with three 120 mm blue LED fans and a side panel window in addition to being quite sturdily constructed of aluminum, this case is made to please gamers.
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008
The Raidmax Smilodon is the next PC Case in the Technic3D Editorship. See you in the following Review which qualities the Gaming Tower with Window, blue LED Fan and many Features presents. Better than the Sagitta Case?
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Friday, January 25, 2008
The Raidmax Sagitta 2, the new second edition of the original Sagitta, offers a number of aesthetical as well as design improvements. This stylish case will certainly stick out at the LAN party scene. Gamers alike will be asking you where you got this pimpin' case. This isn't one of those cases that are great on the outside, but not so great on the inside. The Sagitta 2 has a number of features that help separate it from the pack. This really isn't your every day gaming case. Let's take a look to see why it isn't your typical gaming case.
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Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Among the first PC cases I reviewed, and the first expensive one (I consider mid-towers over $150USD expensive) was the Raidmax Samurai. Though the chassis was your standard steel tool-free case, it was covered with a streamlined polystyrene shell, with a sprayed-on showcar paint job. It was Raidmax's top of the line gaming case at the time. The shell gave it an all-out modded look, and there wasn't any other pre-modded case on the market that came close. That was four years ago. The Samurai is still undoubtedly the most radical case I have owned, and the friend I gave it to still uses it and still gets favorable comments on it, ranging from admiration to awe. It is the last Raidmax product I had my hands on, so I am looking forward to seeing if the Aztec lives up to my expectations for a Raidmax gaming case, a well-made case that is definitely not boring. I would also hope to see some decent cooling for today's hot CPUs and GPUs. Read on to see if it does.
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Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Today's review sample is the Aztec ATX case, Raidmax' latest attempt to please the gaming market with their "Elite" line of cases. With various options for cooling, some intense LED lights and a removable motherboard tray, this monster of a case looks like a promising product.
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Sunday, October 23, 2005
The exterior is stylish and simply elegant, a large window has endless possibilities, the aluminum adds to the flavor of the case and the large LEDs give it a bit o' bling. The tool less design makes installing drives and cards effortless, but they could have gone one small step further with thumbscrews for the side panels. An integrated 450W PSU supplies more than enough power for my needs but a power user should always look for something beyond. I wouldn?t have a problem whatsoever recommending the case to a friend or a relative. If you're looking for an intelligent case with a simple, elegant style, this is the case for you...
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Monday, August 29, 2005
RAIDMAX is not a name you'd associate with high-end power supplies; and this is not a high end powersupply. The company delivers a mainstream-quality component at near generic price levels. If it comes down to a generic 500W power supply or the RAIDMAX LDE6001E, the choice is should be obvious. During testing the LDE6001E performed well; the +12V rail voltage dipped a bit at 11.84V with the system idle, but we did not experience any stability problems with our Pentium 4 system running Prime95. The other voltages were rock solid, which is good because there are many components inside a computer that can fail if fed bad power...
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