It's a common misconception with case design.Case: I refuse to believe a case with a full mesh front and 4 included fans is bad for airflow. As a budget case, the build quality won't be the best and the fans might be a bit loud but this won't affect performance at all. If you like it, I'd leave it alone
Thanks for this explanation 👌It's a common misconception with case design.
As you step up components on the interior, you have to step up airflow.
The fact that this case is a mesh design doesn't really mean much.
At the low end, you don't factor in the high end design tools like solidworks that do airflow analysis but cost a fortune, you literally just throw together a box that will accommodate the components. There just isn't the R&D work done to maximise airflow, that would end up putting the case price too high and price you out of the market.
When you're at the budget level with a case costing £20 - £50, you can't put in the high quality design fans that cost £25 a piece, those that are designed to very tight tolerances, exactly for the reason of moving higher volumes of air. You have to include the mass produced chinese market fans that cost a few dollars a piece.
Just buy a cheap everyday fan off amazon and compare the airflow to even a sickleback or something let alone the higher tier Noctua's or Corsairs, and you'll instantly tell the difference.
That's aside from the design internally that's done on the higher end products, where they factor in the airflow path using flow simulation, as putting a strut or something 2mm to the left can change or disrupt the airflow enormously. All that is factored in to the higher end cases. The cost is really not due to materials so much (obviously they play a part), it's more the R&D costs that need to be reclaimed.
It's not that it's a bad case by any means, that's not what I'm saying. But when you're factoring in a 6800XT, it's just not going to provide what's required.