Specification and Test Methodology
NZXT H440 New Edition Specification |
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Motherboard Support | Mini-ITX, Micro-ATX or ATX | |
Dimensions (H x W x D) | 512mm x 220mm x 480mm | |
Drive Bays | Internal | 11 x 3.5in 8 x 2.5in |
Cooling | Front | 2x 140mm or 3x 120mm (included) |
Rear | 1x 140mm (included) or 120mm | |
Top | 2x 140mm or 3x 120mm | |
Expansion Slots | 7 | |
I/O Port | 2x USB 3.0 2x USB 2.0 Headphone and mic |
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Power Supply Standard | ATX (not included) | |
Clearance | CPU Cooler | 180mm |
Graphics Card | 294mm (with HDD) 428mm (without HDD) |
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Cable Management | 17.7mm - 32.5mm (3-5mm dampening material) | |
Warranty | 2 Years |
Comparison Chassis |
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Chassis | Form Factor | HEXUS Review | Reviewed Price | Product Page |
Antec P380 | Full-tower | May 2015 | £160 | Antec.com |
be quiet! Silent Base 600 | Mid-tower | October 2015 | £94 | Bequiet.com |
Cooler Master MasterCase 5 | Mid-tower | August 2015 | £90 | Coolermaster.com |
Cooler Master Silencio 652S | Mid-tower | May 2015 | £75 | Coolermaster.com |
Corsair Carbide Series 100R SE | Mid-tower | June 2015 | £50 | Corsair.com |
Corsair Carbide Series 400C | Mid-tower | January 2016 | £80 | Corsair.com |
Corsair Carbide Series 600C | Mid-tower | December 2015 | £120 | Corsair.com |
Fractal Design Define S | Mid-tower | April 2015 | £70 | Fractal-design.com |
Nanoxia Deep Silence 5 | Full-tower | September 2015 | £115 | Nanoxia-world.com |
NZXT H440 New Edition | Mid-tower | January 2016 | £90 | NZXT.com |
HEXUS Chassis Test Bench |
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Hardware Components | HEXUS Review | Product Page | |
Processor | Intel Core i5-3570K (quad-core, overclocked up to 4.40GHz) | April 2012 | Intel.com |
CPU Cooler | be quiet! Dark Rock 3 | - | Bequiet.com |
Motherboard | Asus Sabertooth Z77 | - | Asus.com |
Memory | 8GB G.Skill Ripjaws-X (2x4GB) DDR3 @ 1,600MHz | - | Gskill.com |
Graphics Card | 2x EVGA GeForce GTX 970 SSC in SLI (2x 4GB) | April 2015 | EVGA.com |
Power Supply | be quiet! Dark Power Pro 10 (750W) | July 2012 | Bequiet.com |
Storage Device | 120GB SanDisk Extreme SSD | March 2012 | Sandisk.co.uk |
Monitor | Philips Brilliance 4K Ultra HD LED (288P6LJEB/00) | - | Philips.co.uk |
Operating system | Windows 8.1 (64-bit) | October 2012 | Microsoft.com |
Test Methodology
To get a truer feel of how today's chassis perform, we've revamped our test platform to better illustrate the noise levels and heat build up of a modern-day build. Most chassis become hot and noisy when attempting to cool our previous platform, which consisted of dual Radeon HD 7950 graphics cards, so we've refreshed our GPUs, CPU cooler and PSU to offer a more accurate depiction of the recent hardware landscape.
Our Z77 test platform now consists of an ASUS Sabertooth motherboard, an Intel Core i5-3570K processor overclocked to 4.4GHz, a be quiet! Dark Rock 3 CPU cooler, 8GB of G.Skill Ripjaws-X memory and two factory-overclocked EVGA GeForce GTX 970 SSC graphics cards in an SLI configuration.
To find out how well the chassis can cool this particular setup, we log CPU temperature while encoding a large 4K video clip. This task puts full load on all available CPU cores and we extend the stress test by carrying out multiple passes. In order to provide a stabilised reading we then calculate an average temperature across all cores from the last five minutes of encoding.
To get an idea of graphics-card cooling performance, we log GPU temperature while playing Tomb Raider at a 4K resolution with Ultimate quality settings and SLI enabled. Last but not least, we also measure chassis noise by using a PCE-318 noise meter to take readings when idle and while gaming.
All chassis are tested only with the standard manufacturer-supplied fans (any/all of which are set to 'silent' in the Asus BIOS or low-speed using a fan controller if present), and to take into account the fluctuating ambient temperature, our graphs depict both actual and delta temperature - the latter is the actual CPU/GPU temperature minus the ambient. For the record, the ambient temperature while testing NZXT's H440 New Edition was recorded as 19.7ºC.