
Show off your high-profile components and RGB lighting behind a beautiful tool-free tempered glass side panel. Modern Front Panel I/O: Puts your connections within easy reach, including a USB 3.1 Type-C Port, 2x USB 3.0 port, and a combination audio/microphone jack. Motherboard Tray with Customizable Fan Mounts: Side-mount up to 3x 120mm fans or up to a 360mm radiator, enabling new flexible cooling options.
#CORSAIR 5000D AIRFLOW ATX MID TOWER PC#
TwoĬORSAIR AirGuide fans offer directed airflow to your PC’s hottest components, while room for four storage drives and a modernįront I/O panel, including a USB-C port, ensure your PC is ready for this upgrade, and the next.Ĭlean and Cool: The 5000D makes a stunning, showpiece-worthy PC easy to build, and even easier to keep cool with the space and flexibility to mount multiple 360mm radiators. To mount up to 10x 120mm fans or multiple 360mm radiators, and a motherboard tray with customizable side fan mounts. A wealth of flexible cooling options let you build your PC your way, including room Sight, but easy to route with 25mm of depth. CORSAIR RapidRoute cable management keeps your cables out of The 2.5" mounting slots are in a different spot.The CORSAIR 5000D AIRFLOW is a mid-tower ATX case that shows off your PC, and not its cables, finished with an airflowoptimizedįront panel for maximum ventilation to your system. If you're fully using SSDs/PCIe storage, then you can just remove the 3.5" housing and it won't matter. My power cables are able to bend up and over the housing, but only just barely, it's much tighter fit than it ought to be. One other issue: the housing for 3.5" hard drives butts up a bit too close to the back of the power supply, especially if you have a larger power supply (mine is a Corsair 850W). None of this would be necessary if not for the superfluous side fan slots. The "cable guard" also butts up uncomfortably close to the edge of my GPU (it's touching an exposed radiator).

What you need to do is to thread everything through a pair of rectangular cable cutouts next to the motherboard, but this will require removing the rubber things that come mounted on the cutouts, because they get in the way of thick power cables.

I removed it, thinking I would throw it out, but once I was all finished with my setup I realized the airflow leakage problem I'd created, and had disassemble almost everything to get it back in. You can remove it to get it out of the way, but it's an incredible pain to get it in and out. It does help covering up some loose cables from visibility, but it sits tight up against the motherboard and leaves a crevice too narrow for threading thick power cables. Corsair addresses this leak issue with a metal sheet (a "cable guard"), that sits between the two sets of fan slots, but I *despise* that cable guard. I don't see how it adds anything to the fan slots in the front (would you really populate all six fan slots?), and it creates a problem of air intake from the front potentially leaking out the unoccupied fan slots on the side, which are directly adjacent. There is a triple fan slot along the side, which creates more trouble than it's worth.
