Lian Li PC-C36 MUSE home theater case
GHoosdum
Icrontian
Lian Li has been known for years as a designer of quality aluminum PC enclosures. Many an enthusiast has built a performance rig inside a Lian Li tower case. This summer, Lian Li released two new HTPC enclosures that follow the company's design principles of simplicity and efficiency. These offerings, the Lian Li PC-C36 MUSE and PC-C37 MUSE, offer similar layouts with slightly different feature s... Continue reading
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Yes, that's my parents' cheapo progressive scan player that I threw in the media center when mine bit the dust. I've been meaning to take that sticker off of there... I should have for this photo op!
They can get a bit distracting. I'd personally unplug them for regular use in the media center if they were in line of sight.
I don't actually have a photo in the review that's a good representation of the drive door. It looks better than you'd think, just matching piece of aluminum that can be attached to the drive door with double stick tape. I didn't stick it on because I was only performing a temporary installation for the review. The pic of the front of the case shows it with the fastening tape that was used for packing still affixed, making it appear a bit odd.
It definitely captures Lian Li's design philosophy, leading to a nice sleek front panel.
I'm not sure I like the way the optical bay looks on the front. I know it would limit choices, but I think the case would look a lot better if it just had a slot for slot-loading drives.
thanks. good review. pics and descrips were very helpful.
If your Micro-ATX motherboard has a 1x PCI-E slot and a normal PCI slot, I'd recommend seeing if you can get your PCI-E and PCI cards with half-height bracket.
Or, if you can't find them and your cards' PCBs are not full width, you can take the attachment bracket off the back of the card and fashion a new one using the blank out of the back of the case. I've done it before using a drill and a dremel for a PCI video card I once owned.