Joined on 06/04/05
OK CASE HAS 1U PS

Pros: Has standard 1u ps. good lay out
Cons: power supply on cheap side. but is standard 1u so it dont matter. 4 drives on startup are alot to ask a little small 200w ps. without delayed spindle startup.
Overall Review: you get what u pay for. if you build this case correctly it is not bad. I would put a 300w 1u ps in with quality parts and u would be fine
Owner of 100's of dual monitor stands

Pros: cheap price, will fit dual 24", small shipping box - easy to stock.
Cons: defective collars, needed to get new collars from mcmasters so that the set screw would not fall out. monitors sag.
Overall Review: would use the ergotron or the chiefmfg. cheif hard to deal with, but great products. I would go out of my way for an ergotron dual stand. pay the extra for the ergotron, you won't regret it. if you need to save money use old phone books to raise and hold your monitors. not worth building your own I have done that to.
This Review is for The Manufacture and the techs that really care.

Pros: Works great, got a couple hundred running in servers, desktops. ASRock and mini-itx form factor rock. Boots great with 32GB ram. just have to read the specs and follow them.
Cons: Found Board Assembly ERROR. The cmos battery wires were under Small heat sink that cools the cpu voltage regulators. During inspection of board before installation of cpu fan, I noticed this heat sink was leaning away from the back connector side and allmost touching fins of factory intel cpu cooler when later installed onto the board. Simple to fix. loosen 2 screws on back of board gentle pull out cmos battery wires out from underneath of the aluminum heat sink. Then retighten 2 screws gentle and tight. The sticky tape like stuff on heat sink surface stayed intacked. This can not happen. because normal assemble procedures would be to install heatsinks before plugging in battery. So how this happened on a sealed board scares me in the sense that board is assembled in a incorrect order that can allow this to happen. If heatsinks were installed first this could never of happened. Please up date your board assembly procedures to remove this possibility from happening.
Overall Review: Now the small heat sink stands periductular to the board as normal. I only found one like this so far on the 370Z. I'm also checking all my 270Z boards also. BECAUSE THIS CAN NOT HAPPEN. I check/tighten factory heat sinks because I occasionally find boards with missing, loose, or stripped heatsink screws. I have found north bridge chips with broken plastic spring clips.
LOVED DYMO, NOW NOT.

Pros: lovely printer
Cons: Software installs apple bonjour with out telling you. That is just wrong. It shows up in the add remove programs after installing dymo software. What gives.
Overall Review: printer is Great if software was not so goofy. Slipping programs in during install is just wrong. Just like if you click on preferences it auto checks customer participation. That is also very WRONG. I hope Dymo gets there act to gether and becomes honest again.
This printer is dangerous

Pros: LABEL PRINTER WORKS GREAT IS NETWORKABLE (SHARABLE) ON NETWORK. HAVING TO GO BACK TO OLDER SOFTWARE,
Cons: SOFTWARE LIES AND IS DANGEROUS. YOU CLICK OFF CUSTOMER FEEDBACK PROGRAM DURING INSTALL. AND SOFTWARE TURNS IT BACK ON BY GOING TO EDIT PERFERENCES. SOFTWARE VERSION 8.5.0.1751 THEIR LATEST. INSTALL SOFTWARE BUGGY. YOU CLICK ON ADVANCE INSTALL, YOU CAN ONLY CLICK ON PRINTER INSTALL OR BOTH, NOT JUST SOFTWARE INSTALL. I KNOW YOU HAVE TO HAVE PRINTER INSTALLED AND I DO HAVE LASTED 64BIT PRINTER FOR 450TURBO INSTALLED BEFORE INSTALLING SOFTWARE. HOW DUMB OF THEM. LAST WEEK DOWN LOADING SOFTWARE FROM THEIR WEBSITE, BOTH SOFTWARE, 32&64 BIT PRINTER DRIVERS AND PDF FILES DOWNLOADED AS ONLY BIG LONG NUMBERS FOR FILENAMES. THE FILENAMES ON WEBSITE SINCE HAS BEEN FIXED. BUT THE SPYWARE HAS NOT. I DO NOT LIKE BUGGY OR LYING SOFTWARE. PRETTY PLEASE FIX THIS ISSUE AND POST APPOLOGY.
Overall Review: THIS IS SPYWARE. BECAUSE IF IT WAS NOT IT WOULD BE EASY FOR THEIR CODERS TO FIX. I HOPE COMPANY ANSWERS US AND FIXES THIS. Now I got alot of machines to fix and NOW I HAVE TO PROTECT OUR NETWORKS FROM DYMO WITH FIREWALL SETTINGS.
Great case need more revisions

Pros: side panels, no more tiny laptop type to loose or have just the right screwdriver for. I love lian li cases they last 10 years plus. less bone head issues than others. and the fans work long time even in greasy dirty shops.
Cons: to much wasted space on front. I am moving power/reset buttons to side and putting in the next size bigger fan. Fan is good, could be bigger. feet like mentioned before scratch. CHECK all pop rivets for loose junk. I fine about one per case that has metal that will fall off after build. Don't be affraid to round around or shake case before build to fine loose pop rivet balls. if case is dropped RECHECK pop rivets. I have had found metal in case after client drops lian-li cases. could of easy put 160mm instead of 140 mm fan 200 will technically fit, working on mod now. no door cut in left side for removable 2.5 to 3.5 frame kit, could use laptop cd/2.5 hd adapter in top 5.25 bay. no clear sides yet. will have to make plexiglass side for mine with 2 - 3.5 cut-out lined up with 2 of the inside bays for the 3.5 to 2.5 removable frame kit.
Overall Review: MOVE THE BACK COVER MOUNTS FURTHER APART. SO POWER SUPPLY does not have to be slid forward so much to take out. no sense in having to take off back on mini-itx cases. really dont need powersupply bracket on back any more other than to flip over no standard powersupplies. I use a mini-box pico power supply on mainboard for most builds and if big video card is used then use the 4 bolt to 3/6bolt power supply adapter and use the little "spf" type powersupplys only need 300watt for big video video. then there is lots of room. set power button to turn on both power supplys, easy mod. Just take power supply apart and check and resolder. I find something wrong with most all power supplys, loose stripped regulator heatsink screws, metal shavings, bad sodlering, pinched wires, miss-wired, underrated bridge rectorfiers, bad airflow designs, fan thermal switch poorly located, etc.