
Enermax ELC240 review
Last reviewed
Some of the design elements are pretty clunky, but when configured in silent mode, this is a very impressive cooling kit.
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Some of the design elements are pretty clunky, but when configured in silent mode, this is a very impressive cooling kit.

There's no question what the defining feature of Enermax's Fulmo GT chassis is from the moment you take it out the box: size.

Great design, great cooler

Okay, as far as PC components go the hard drive enclosure is hardly the sexiest piece of kit around. But as far as they do go, the Jazz is definitely one of the slickest.

The elder statesman in this crack squad, we decided to include the Enermax Glory as we've used one for the last year and set great stock by it. While it's limited by its IDE interface, it's got some neat tricks up its sleeve

Unsheathing this beast of a power supply is a pleasing process. Clad in gunmetal grey armour, and sporting a cooling fan the size of Bolton, it's clearly a high-performance product. The modular cabling can handle a massive number of components
The Galaxy is the first PSU we've seen that reaches the 1,000W barrier, but is also the first to use a form factor 50 per cent larger than standard, making fitting it into a small case a tricky business with the added size and weight.

There's a lesson to be learned for those that want to use spraypainted grey mesh as part of a black case: all the nifty drive-covering flaps in the world won't save your case from looking like a disastrous early Eighties boombox.

It's amazing to think that this midi-tower is made on the other side of the world, shipped thousands of miles and can still be flogged to us, the public, for less than £40.