For the package is over the limit for some people, the Thermaltake Spedo is above all a use of real high fly names to impress to any the wary consumers. Thermaltake is one of those companies that fill the gaps when major high performance companies can’t be bothered to make to those cheap ass modders happy. Thermaltake takes in that endeavour, by having low prized coolers and also accessories that may fill or hold the system you have; the company can make great products if you are willing to pay a little more extra for the quality. But for the range they have are pretty generic in a sense with the use of plastic windows for the side and also the build of the items; sharp edges and also plastic feel on some brushed metal cases, they really are filling the gaps with cheap plastic and with good reason.
The Thermaltake Spedo Advance Package is not a full featured package from Thermaltake with all of the coolers and water-blocks included, not a whole range of products bundled into it, and it is just a case, nothing more. As I was saying (you need a bit of beating to really tell you that it is only a case) is a new type of case that really goes with stunning design meets up with cheap plastic. Spedo is a midi tower case with a windowed side with a large 120mm fans that exhaust the graphics hot air from its side and with two in the back and one large fans gives in a triple phase cooling; the cool air comes in the front, then to the bottom of the case to the graphics cards you have out in the side and for the rest it exhaust out in the two back fans that are 80mm in diameter and one large 230mm fan on top. For the storage of the entire computer gizmos you have it can hold six 3.5in drive bays with bullet holes around it and four 5.2in optical drive bays with tool-less design, by using the push buttons to install and exit out your four individual drives (well there is another three 3.5in drive bay, but who is going to use those really in the bottom pile) internally it has space for most Intel and AMD systems with also cable management in the back , so it doesn’t cover up the front part design of your system and also the PSU compartment is located in the bottom so it doesn’t block where the large 230mm fan is doing its rounds.
For the test bed performance of the Spedo is an all passive stress test will the CPU GPU are using passive cooling and a lot of aluminium fins to make good work over the six fans in the case. The idle temp recording above 40 degrees with the fans settings at its medium, but the load stress test increase the temperature by about 30 degrees; going 50 in the CPU and more on the GPU by about 69 degrees. The Spedo performed quite well with the test, even thought the temps were high, but with a few active coolers rather than passive makes it a cool case to have with a cheap ass prize, but with the built quality of the case just been thrown out in the bin, whirring sounds you can hear in the background may turn off people. But overall it is a good case with normal operations.
