
There are also just a couple of mounting holes that are too small for fan screws (although they would fit radiator screws). Two 140mm fans are supported, but they don’t line up with the cutouts and the mounting holes are at the bottom of the panel rather than the top, so there’s no way to point a 140mm intake fan directly back towards the CPU cooler. The mounts inside the front panel have three perfectly-sized ducts for 120mm fans, but not so for 140mm ones.

By opting out of a filter they’ve also made it possible to mount fans on the outside of the chassis, nearly flush with the front panel, which should draw more air from outside of the case instead of just recirculating it inside. Dust will gather on the outside and some will inevitably get through, but it’s easy to wipe down and the front panel comes off easily.


The NR600’s front is covered with a fine mesh that acts as both a filter and a front panel, hopefully avoiding the thermal problems that some cases introduce by backing mesh with additional layers of filtration. 140mm x 2 / 120mm x 3 (MasterBox NR600 without ODD)ġ40mm x 2/ 120mm x 2 (MasterBox NR600 with ODD)ģ60 / 280 / 240 / 140 / 120mm (MasterBox NR600 without ODD)Ģ80 / 240 / 140 / 120mm (MasterBox NR600 with ODD)Ģ40mm / 120mm (MasterBox NR600 without ODD) (35mm max motherboard component height)Ģ40mm (with ODD removed) / 120mm (MasterBox NR600 with ODD) (35mm max motherboard component height)Ī glance might not make it clear how much more ventilated the NR600 is than the H500, though.
