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Cyberpower Infinity Fusion Titan SE System Review


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The CyberPower Infinity Fusion Titan SE system ships in a large brown box, and padded inside is the Corsair Obsidian 650D case box, with the system inside. We reviewed this case way back in July 2011, and it won our highest award, you can read it here. We won't analyse the case too deeply today, if you want to study it closer, follow our review link above.
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The Corsair Obsidian 650D case is very well made, and can handle a lot of high end hardware, even a dedicated watercooling kit.
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Cyberpower have installed the watercooling kit and from the front you can see the status, next to the blu ray drive and company badge. We like the option to install a hard drive into the hidden bay at the top of the chassis. Very useful for moving files across, or for keeping a high capacity offline backup of important data.
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It is important to remove the side panel before turning the system on. CyberPower pad out the inside of the case with protective air pockets. This ensures that nothing can move during transportation potentially causing damage. Particularly important when there is a watercooling kit inside.

The 650D case is particularly easy to work with, as the side panel can be removed without the need of a screwdriver. There are two levers at the top of the panel.
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When the side door (and padding) is removed, we are greeted with an exceptionally clean internal build.
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CyberPower are using the Corsair CX600M power supply. This may be an inexpensive power supply, but it is exceptionally capable. We reviewed it  back at the start of April this year, over here.

That said, in a £2k high end gaming system we would expect something a little higher up in the Corsair chain, such as the Corsair TX650M.
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The Nvidia GTX Titan is one of the best graphics cards that money can buy, retailing for around £850 today in the United Kingdom. Above, we can see the XSPC water cooling kit and Kingston HyperX Predator gaming memory. The Bluray drive is situated below the water-cooling kit as shown in the image above, bottom right.
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The Plextor 256GB SSD drive is installed in the same rack as the 1TB HDD drive, behind the large intake fan.
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The XSPC radiator is installed at the top of the case, with another exhaust fan set at the rear of the chassis. There is certainly no shortage of airflow in this build.
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The cable routing in the case is certainly excellent, with loose fan cables tied together away from the air flow locations.
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Removing the other side panel is painless, accessed by two levers at the top. Again cable routing is pretty good on the other side of the build, with most of the cables routed cleanly out of the way.
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The system, viewed from a rear angle.

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7 comments

  1. Excellent system, I like it – but I agree Core i7 witith Titan

  2. I have a cyberpower system and it has given me a bit of problems in the last year. my fault though I think as I tried to change the video card and damaged a slot. good built though and nice support

  3. seems like a good deal to me – although id rather build my own and save a few hundred quid overall

  4. Correction maybe? 3570k is an i5 processor, not an i7 processor

  5. chris sucks dick

  6. i agree

  7. massive cock