Lian Li PC-Q21A Case Review 18

[section_title title=”Introduction and Specifications”]

Introduction

Brand: Lian Li
Model: Lian Li PC-Q21
Price (UK): £59.99 @ OCUK (at time of review)
Price (US): $103.00 @ Amazon.com (at time of review)

Alongside the likes of CaseLabs and MountainMods, we often associate another rather special manufacturer when it comes to the art of top of the range enthusiast PC cases. The company in question is of course Lian Li. Founded way back in 1983, the Taiwanese giants have established themselves as ‘THE’ brand to choose when considering a full aluminium chassis of any size.

Of course when we think of Lian Li we often have an image in our heads involving incredibly expensive, full tower cases, with a high level of quality and workmanship, large enough to house not only the latest EATX motherboard and multiple GPUs, but a full custom water cooling loop as well (then even have spare room for the family cat!). Yet it’s worth taking note that Lian Li also sport a rather substantial range of SFF (Small Form Factor) cases with no less than 28 MITX cases in their current line-up. Today we take a look at what is perhaps the smallest case in their range and perhaps the smallest case currently available that could home a powerful little gaming rig.

So here we have the Lian Li PC-Q21. A case entirely composed of aluminium, which not only makes it lightweight at just 1.47kg, but the majority of the visible external areas also give us the spectacle and elegance of brushed aluminium. Along with great aesthetics offering a timeless quality to suit even the living room, the PC-Q21 offers a compact cuboid design measuring just 149mm(W) x 257mm(H) x 224mm(D), giving it the flexibility to do so as well. On the all important hardware front, the interior of the PC-Q21 may be tiny, but within its brushed aluminium walls we find enough space for not only your basic MITX set-up, but room for a Slimline ODD (Optical Disc Drive), 2 x 3.5″ or 3 x 2.5″ storage drives, a single 120mm fan (optional) and even a graphics card of up to 170mm! In fact you’d be entirely forgiven for thinking ‘Lian Li + aluminium + compact + gaming = mega expensive!’, yet with an average price of less than £60 it proves surprisingly affordable too.

Can Lian Li really deliver us what could possibly be the home of a compact powerhouse of a gaming rig? Let’s take a closer look!

Specifications

Model PC-Q21 A/B
Case Type mini Tower Chassis
Dimensions (W) 149mm
(H) 257mm
(D) 224mm
Colour Black
Silver
Front bezel Material Aluminium
Side Panel Aluminium
Body Material Aluminium
Net Weight 1.47kg
5.25″ drive bay (External) 1 Slim ODD (Slot-In)
or 2.5″ HDD x1
3.5″ drive bay (External) None
HDD bay 3.5″ HDD x2
or 2.5 HDD x3
Expansion Slot 2
MB Type Mini-ITX
System Fan(Base) 120mm x1 (Optional)
I/O Ports USB 3.0 x2
PSU Type SFX or SFX-L
Maximum Compatibility VGA Card length: 170mm
CPU cooler height: 60mm
PSU length: 170mm
Features – 3.5″ or 2.5″ drive mountable in the front.
– Tool-less screws for easy HDD mounting.
– Removable HDD tray – Up to two 2.5″ drives HDD tray can be removed to make more room for 3.5″ drive or 120mm fan.
– Maximum Compatibility – CPU cooler height:60mm / PSU length:170mm / Expansion Card length:170mm
– Front I/O Ports – USB 3.0 x2

 

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1 COMMENT

  1. Why didn’t you reverse the PSU so it’s fan was facing the CPU fan? That would allow the PSU to exhaust hot air from the CPU area and probably dramatically lower your CPU temps. Also I’m pretty sure you can fit a slim 120mm fan below the R9 Nano. It would be blowing directly into the graphics card, but some cool external air would get into the case to give the PSU and CPU fans cooler air to suck in. Also it’d create positive pressure in the case to prevent dust coming in and to push some hot air out.

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