Cooler Master HAF 922 Mid-Tower Case
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Max Slowik
Kurtis
Cooler Master
Dec. 2, 2009
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Introduction
Cooler Master. A name among names. They're polarizing, most people love or hate their style, and the HAFs are no exception. The 922 is dead sexy, particularly if you're warm for radiators and bulkheads. Following in ammo box style, Cooler Master's made another very large, very breezy case targeted at overclockers with an eye on water-cooling.
But size and big fans also mean quiet. It only takes so much turbine noise for a gamer to start thinking that there's gotta be a better case out there. This is such a case. Sure, there are only three fans, but two of them are 200mm--eight inches wide. 'Course, it's not size that matters, right?
Unlike the front bezel, the whole case is steel, with the only tool-free hardware being the 5.25" clips and the 3.5" drive caddies. After a long wave of cheap, snap-prone tool-free crap, all this steel is a sight to behold. Don't think of it as a heavy case; think of it as stable
Lots of mesh, lots of fan, and lots and lots of space. Like I said, people will love it or hate it.
First Looks
Besides the angles and holes, the HAF 922 is austere. I don't just mean visually, although that's absolutely true; the buttons are square and undecorated, the activity lights are slightly highlighted and countersunk, the whole I/O panel is simple and unobstructed. The fan spots are stamped from the panels, and the only flourish is the glossed HAF in the matte-finish paint. This case is straightforward in ways that minimalize in style and in cost.
The front fan is red LED-lit, but if that's not your thing, you can turn it off--there's a button on the top panel for that.
    
Either foreseeing the desire to watercool or need to replace the 200mm fans, both the top and side panels of the case can be converted to using dual 120mm fans, spaced correctly for radiators. There's two holes in the back to pass hoses through for cooling loops.
This case isn't just about getting a lot of air through it, it's about having lots, and I mean lots of space to work in. If there was any way for there to be extra space between the back of the case and the motherboard, I'm sure Cooler Master would have done it. It's designed for fast, easy building and speedy hardware swaps.
It's definitely a features-light case, with style about the only trick up its sleeve beyond an e-SATA connection. But the overall minimalism doesn't impart any build flaws, it's all very simple, and very, very accessible.
Once you get your hands on it, it's clear: this isn't a fancy case. It's for someone who's mind is focused on what goes inside more than how it looks.
Page 1: Introduction and First Looks
Page 2: Inside the Case
Page 3: In Use and Conclusion
1 - Posted by
weird
on December 4, 2009 - 8:34 am
I see the title say HAF922 but review unit is HAF932??
2 - Posted by
Max Slowik
on December 4, 2009 - 11:49 am
The title is correct, it's a 922, the photos need to be swapped...
3 - Posted by
little1
on December 7, 2009 - 6:58 am
Well, does it means you tested the cased without having it in your hands ?
Sorry but it does not sound very serious.
4 - Posted by
Kurtis
on December 7, 2009 - 3:24 pm
Bah... That was my mistake. We don't review items without having them on-hand, but Max doesn't have a good setup anymore for taking photos so I got photos from CoolerMaster. Apparently I grabbed photos for the wrong model. Sorry about that.
5 - Posted by
Kurtis
on December 7, 2009 - 3:36 pm
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