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Enermax Fulmo GT Full Tower Review

The Fulmo GT has  a massive drive cage with 10 drive trays available for storage. We can load as many as 10 x 2.5″ or 3.5″ hard drives in individual, removable drive trays.  Thankfully there are plenty of screws in the hardware kit designated for hard drives.  The direction of the drive cage means that all cables will be hidden behind the motherboard tray.

Optical drive mounting in the Fulmo GT is a tool free design. Simply push the locking mechanism towards the rear of the chassis to unlock it, insert the drive in the chosen location then slide the locking mechanism towards the front of the case to lock it in place.

Here we have an image of the connections that originate on the top I/O panel.  This includes all the cables to hook up the 4 USB 3.0 ports. 1 eSATA port, audio jacks, the power and hard drive LED's and finally the Power/Reset buttons.  Inside the Fulmo GT there are 2 small PCB's mounted on the motherboard tray. The one closest to the CPU socket has a molex input to power up to 3 fans that can be attached to the PCB.  The 2nd PCB has a row of 2pin connections that power the LED functionality of the Vegas Fans.

The rear panel allows us to view the 2 power supply mounting positions. We plan to use the bottom mounting position for our system build.  There remainder of the rear panel consists of 10 expansion slots, 7 liquid cooling cutouts, the I/O shield cutout and a single 140mm exhaust fan.

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3 comments

  1. Very expensive, but quite nice looking indeed.

  2. Good stylish looks, but its a lot of money for a steel chassis

    is ‘jumbo tower’ just something they made up btw ?

  3. What a blatent Coolermaster CM 690 II Advanced rip-off….