Thermaltake package the A30 within a compact cardboard box which features a plastic handle in the top which lets you carry it around easily. The front of the box features a large product photo of the A30 alongside a badge advertising the USB3.0 compatibility of the case.
On the reverse side of the box, Thermaltake outline some of the main features of the product, illustrating them with a series of diagrams. Inside, the case is sandwiched between two slabs of polystyrene for protection.
The included bundle is reasonably generous, consisting of an installation guide, all the required screws, a case speaker and two 2.5″ drive brackets.
Wow that is ugly. good airflow, but wow.
My big problem with thermaltake is their use of crap fans. I have a case of theirs and I had to replace all the fans as t hey were making a weird humming noise. Not a standard noise sound, but a weird, almost vibration sound.
I really think they tend to have some quality control issues.
I’ve actually built one of these last week.
Actually a really good case to build in, being completely disassemble helps heaps when plugging everything in and with cable management.
I don’t think it looks that bad really. Unlike the ugly as hell normal Armor Tower, this little box is robust and really tough actually.
Too fu*king heavy!