BitFenix Colossus Mini-ITX Review - Performance Analysis
There was little doubt that cooling performance wasn't going to be as good as the Prodigy for the simple reason the Colossus Mini-ITX lacks much of the formers' ventilation. We've seen on plenty of other cases the difference a mesh front section can make and it was also fairly predictable that the Colossus Mini-ITX was going to outperform the Phenom too.
In the end the CPU delta T of 52°C was pretty average, being 9°C warmer than a mesh-fronted Prodigy and 2°C cooler than the Phenom and EVGA Hadron Air. A lot of this is down to noise too - the Colossus Mini-ITX was one of the quietest cases we've tested thanks to a couple of inconspicuous fans and also to the front door and lack of vents in the side panel. On the flip side, this inevitably leads to higher temperatures.
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The GPU delta T of 56°C was closer to the Phenom and with no vent in the side panel like the Prodigy, its not surprising to see the Colossus Mini-ITX once again post a warmer result, with the Prodigy managing a far more respectable 48°C. All in all, then, not a fantastic result but not a bad one either, and there's also the option to use a larger fan in the front and add two 120mm fans in the roof so there's plenty of room for improvement here.
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BitFenix Colossus Mini-ITX Review - Conclusion
The lighting won't be everyone's cup of tea but with so many bland black boxes coming through our lab recently, the BitFenix Colossus Mini-ITX was a breath of fresh air and manages to add a bit of flare without looking garish or tacky. The front door also gives it a clean look yet offers a noticeable improvement over the Phenom in terms of cooling. Another advantage it has over the Phenom is its front mesh, which while not as free-flowing as that in the Prodigy, does mean that placing a radiator here for water cooling will be effective. With ample room for large graphics cards, the addition of a couple of extra fans or water-cooling will mean there's scope here for housing a high-end PC too.
So while it can't match the Prodigy on cooling, the Colossus otherwise has all the flexibility it offers plus a few refinements too. It's smaller, there's no wobble and the case feels much sturdier while the front door is impressively solid too. With a £75/$99 price tag this is a great little case for the money, whether you're after a modest or mega mini-ITX system.
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