Testseek.com have collected 70 expert reviews of the Corsair Obsidian 750D and the average rating is 86%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Corsair Obsidian 750D.
September 2013
(86%)
70 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(92%)
30 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
86010070
The editors liked
Looks to kill
Attention to the little things
Extremely easy to build
Plethora of ventilation options
And included dust filters at every intake
Toolfree hard drive and SSD options
Spacious
Sturdy build quality
The editors didn't like
Some more clearance for cables on the back of the motherboard would be welcome
Excellent construction, Great water-cooling possibilities, Three 140 mm AF140L fans included, Lots of space behind motherboard tray, Excellent cable-routing and hiding possibilities, Excellent 2.5" brackets on the backside of motherboard tray, Modular har
Bumps instead of proper spacers for motherboard, No external 3.5" drive, Hard-drive cages cannot be hung from the top down, Using a long radiator will block a 5.25" bay, A filled 5.25" bay disturbs the looks of the front
The Corsair Obsidian 750D will set you back 150 euros including taxes or 159 US dollars without taxes. Excellent construction Great water-cooling possibilities Three 140 mm AF140L fans included Lots of space behind motherboard tray Excellent cable-routing...
Published: 2013-10-16, Author: Brian , review by: legitreviews.com
Taking design queues from its smaller and larger siblings, the 750D fills the gap and presents itself as a full tower chassis. What I always liked about full tower cases is the amount of room that you receive with them. The Obsidian 750D absolutely did no...
Full-tower PC case for extra room with clean, elegant styling, Very good case cooling options with support for liquid cooling, Two 140mm intake fans and one 140mm exhaust fan included, Eight different case fan mounting locations, Three dust filters: easy
No external hot-swap 3.5” HDD bays, We miss the sturdy side panels and latches on the Obsidian 650D, Corsair Obsidian Series 750D Full-Tower ATX Case, I would like to thank our friends at Corsair for sending us the 750D case to review – thank you, ‹ Cas
The Obsidian Series 750D is the third new Obsidian case to be introduced by Corsair in 2013. It shares many of the same design elements present on Corsair's popular Obsidian 350D micro-ATX chassis and the 900D Super-Tower. The new 750D offers more room, b...
900D styling in a smaller case, Positive pressure as configured, 360mm radiator support
None of the insulation or external drive bays that make some of Corsair's other offerings stand out
Our testbed hardware for the Corsair Obsidian 750D was a Core i7-2600K on an Intel DP67BG2 motherboard with 8GB of RAM and an AMD Radeon HD 6870. Systems were benchmarked by waiting 15 minutes after boot to record idle temps and after 30 minutes of runnin...
The Corsair OBSIDIAN 750D is another welcome addition to the ever growing enclosure lineup of the Fremont giant. That high end doesn't always needs to carry an exuberant price tag is one of the strong points of this 750D. Being a full tower there is n...
To be certain, the 750D isn't a total, market-crushing homerun. Corsair has yet to really hit one of those, but this is at least an excellent entry in their portfolio. Usability has always been their strong suit and the 750D continues to improve on that; ...
The Obsidian Series 750D is a difficult product to wrap one's head around. Its model number suggests superiority to the 650D, and indeed, it surpasses the older model in a number of ways. At the same time, the 750D lacks a number of its predecessors trad...
Alright, let's wrap things up. We think the Corsair Obsidian 750D is a lovely product. It's not exactly in the same league of the 900D, I must admit that. But still the 750D is a perfect example of how a chassis should be, everything makes sense and it o...
lots of space, tool free 2.5" bays that do not interfere with wiring for the 3.5" drive cages, holds any size power supply I can think of, lots of room for wires behind the mainboard tray, several mounting possibilities for the 3.5" cages, looks pretty fantastic,
no screws for power supplies, not enough accessory standoffs for MATX boards,
I really like this case. It's big, it looks fantastic, and it has a lot of things going for it. Like those awesome 2.5" trays that still allow you to run wiring for your 3.5" hard drives behind them and the sheer number of spots for fans. There are a f...