Joined on 05/14/01

Pros: Powers my system quite well, no complaints yet. Opteron 165 DFI Lanparty UT SLI-DR OCZ PC4000 1gb x2 XFX 7800GT (not sli.. yet) 3 hard drives (2 IDE, 1 SATA) NEC CDRW Voltages are as follows- 3.3 @ 3.3 5 @ 5.02 12 @ 12.14
Cons: Fan is rather weak and pushes little air.
Pros: Very fast.
Cons: Much louder than expected. It makes a lot of clicking/clacking noises when seeking data and sounds like a drive bought in the 1990's. At idle it is silent though. Only 8mb cache as opposed to many new drives having 16mb.

Pros: Massive power output. Fixed my stability problems after upgrading to i7! (was running 550w Antec that was 3.5 years old) Extra cables are modular. High quality design, both the cables and the PSU itself.
Cons: LOUD. Coming from a basically dead silent computer, I was disappointed to find that this PSU is easily the loudest thing in the room. Had I known this prior, I would have bought another unit.

Pros: Gets the job done well and works great with a Thermaltake 90mm fan. It keeps my Opteron 165 (1.8ghz) overclocked to 2.4ghz at stock voltage (1.31) idle at around 36 degrees. Under load it gets up to around 42.
Cons: Heavy, but an overrated issue... does not come with fan and for the price, it should. Copper base had a few divits, not as smooth as I thought it would be.

Pros: Very powerful, looks great, sets up very easily.
Cons: The fan is VERY loud at full blast. Luckily, after installing the latest drivers it gets throttled down to an accepible rate. However, it is rather finnicky... randomly it will increase speed (and noise) even when the system is idle and the temperatures are normal. There is downloadable software (that I am unable to mention per neweggs rules) that is supposed to control this, but does not always work and you must wait several minutes for it to return to a quiet level. Also, the software package is not all that impressive. Far Cry is the only exception.

Pros: Not many, honestly.
Cons: Case door came broken and is a very flimsy design. I have to push up on the base to get it to close fully. Side panels are a real pain to get on. Everything has to be lined up just right, but will easily pop off and you must start over. This is especially hard where the hard drives attach. The cables smush up right against the side panel and crush them. Front LCD is not all it’s cracked up to be. It requires running and taping temp diodes all over the place. The instructions for this were not very helpful. It's also very bright and needs an on/off switch of its own. It does not come with a top mountable exhaust fan. Large cheesy ATRIX logo on the front of the case. Also, the black shroud that is supposed to roughly line up with the CPU to divert air does not work with my upgraded heatsink (XP-90C). This wasn’t a big issue until I realized how this shroud must be removed. The entire panel must be disassembled (a dozen or so screws), then the mesh must be pried off.