In Win B2 Stealth Bomber Mid Tower ATX Case
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Installation (continued):
The area around the CPU is a little tight with a large cooler, such as the Thermalright Ultima-90. Getting the 4-pin power connector plugged into the motherboard was a little like playing the board game Operation since the CPU cooler and rear 120mm fan are rather close together.
Looking at the front of the In Win B2 Stealth Bomber mid tower ATX case you can see the closed front door, the buttons, and the LEDs of the case. The red button is for opening the auto-sensing door, the triangular button in the middle is for powering the system on, to the right of that is a hard drive activity LED, and a reset button, which is very hard to press since it is so small.
Pressing the red button engages the mechanism that opens the cockpit like door.
Opening the door is a small gearbox that cranks the door up. It is a little noisy during operation, which lasts roughly 3 seconds. With it open you can see the blue LED mounted in the top of the case. The front door rests on the top of the case while open, allowing easy access to any devices installed in the 5.25" or 3.5" device bays. The blue LED shines down on the area above the power button with the front door raised.
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