• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Cooltek W2

Darksaber

Senior Editor & Case Reviewer
Staff member
Joined
Jul 8, 2005
Messages
3,109 (0.43/day)
Location
Victoria, BC, Canada
System Name Corsair 2000D Silent Gaming Rig
Processor Intel Core i5-14600K
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix Z790-i Gaming Wifi
Cooling Corsair iCUE H150i Black
Memory Corsair 64 GB 6000 MHz DDR5
Video Card(s) Gainward GeForce RTX 4080 Phoenix GS
Storage TeamGroup 1TB NVMe SSD
Display(s) Gigabyte 32" M32U
Case Corsair 2000D
Power Supply Corsair 850 W SFX
Mouse Logitech MX
Keyboard Sharkoon PureWriter TKL
The Cooltek W2 is a bigger version of the W1, able to hold an XL-ATX motherboard and fully sized components. It comes equipped with three 140 mm fans, the same high-quality aluminum shell, and an excellent mix of drive bays - including an external 5.25" drive in the rear. Clocking in at a good 20% less than the Carbide Air 540, the Cooltek W2 is an excellent alternative for those looking for a clean full-sized cube chassis.

Show full review
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Thanks! now how can I get one in the USAs!?

I think I would take this any day over the Plastic 540... much as I like Corsair I hate plastic more!
 
Can't get it in the U.S. directly atm. I tried last week, and ended up ordering one from overseas.

This case is made by Jonsbo, who then sells them through makers like Cooltek and Rosewill.

Keep an eye out, I'll have a video review of it soon myself. :) I'll be sure to post here.


Update... It arrived just now!!! :D

1zdu6o9.jpg
 
Last edited:
It's a good looking case but I want to know what manner of an UX genius decided that having the window on one side and the buttons/sound/usb ports on the opposite is good for usability.
 
I have this case, do you still have it?

Can you try fitting an 80mm fan in the rear section and see if the front still goes on?

Mine hits on the screw heads and no longer sits flush.

Reminds me I need to send cooltek pictures of mine as they don't believe me.
 
I am actually surprised that the case is so 'cheap' considering the materials used and stylized look. Cooltek really did a good job with this one.

@Darksaber: Any chance you might be reviewing the Antec P380 soon?
 
It's a good looking case but I want to know what manner of an UX genius decided that having the window on one side and the buttons/sound/usb ports on the opposite is good for usability.

Yes, I thought this case was spot on until I saw those buttons. The rear DVD drive is a great afterthought but if you used it regularly that would mean 3 sides of this case needs to be accessible.

Very awkward.
 
Can anyone point me to a good site to order this which will ship it to the US? I don't want to wait on rosewill bringing it over to this side of the pond.
 
Can anyone point me to a good site to order this which will ship it to the US? I don't want to wait on rosewill bringing it over to this side of the pond.

Totally agree, I think I actually found a replacement for my TJ07. I like the flat top, as a I tend to rest items on top of my case. I like the modular design with the main components receiving a majority of the cooling. I like the disk drive in the back, it could be a spot for a 5.25 reservoir. Are their any out there that work on their side? Sleek and modern I want one.
 
The Beast is finally built! The case houses everything very well. Unfortunately, I'm having issues with the ASUS mobo. One DIMM slot doesn't work and I keep losing my RAID config in Device Manager. :mad: I'd hate to have to RMA it after spending so much time already trying to get it to work.

Specs:

Intel 5820K
ASUS X99-PRO
MSI 970 Gaming
16GB 2800 DDR4
240GB Seagate SSD
2x 4TB HGST NAS
Corsair H110
Phanteks High Static Pressure Fans
Corsair HX750 PSU


2nbu62d.jpg

11cei5c.jpg
 
@Darksword Which european reseller did you end up buying the case from? Most of the ones I looked at wouldn't ship to the US...
 
I bought it from QuietPC.com They were super fast. I had it to my door in four days.
 
The Beast is finally built! The case houses everything very well. Unfortunately, I'm having issues with the ASUS mobo. One DIMM slot doesn't work and I keep losing my RAID config in Device Manager. :mad: I'd hate to have to RMA it after spending so much time already trying to get it to work.

Specs:

Intel 5820K
ASUS X99-PRO
MSI 970 Gaming
16GB 2800 DDR4
240GB Seagate SSD
2x 4TB HGST NAS
Corsair H110
Phanteks High Static Pressure Fans
Corsair HX750 PSU


2nbu62d.jpg

11cei5c.jpg

thanks for sharing !
Can you pls post temps for CPU/GPU under gaming or Prime95+Furmark loads ?
How are GPU VRM temperatures ?

Do you have fans at the bottom ?

Thanks
 
nice case and nice review
its been a while i havent seen vertical psu on case
and the size still compact
 
I have the 5820K overclocked to 4.5Ghz @ 1.300v so far. Idle temps are about 50C. I've only briefly tested with AID64 so far. I'll try to work in some more tests.

GPU gets to about 73C at full load while running Unigine Heaven at 70% fan speed. I knew going in that this system would run hotter than my old rig in my HAF-XB case. But this system won't be used for gaming all the time, so temps shouldn't be too much of a concern.
 
I have the 5820K overclocked to 4.5Ghz @ 1.300v so far. Idle temps are about 50C. I've only briefly tested with AID64 so far. I'll try to work in some more tests.

GPU gets to about 73C at full load while running Unigine Heaven at 70% fan speed. I knew going in that this system would run hotter than my old rig in my HAF-XB case. But this system won't be used for gaming all the time, so temps shouldn't be too much of a concern.
Thanks for reply!

Indeed this hot for my liking - especially considered separated air chambers, and direct 140mm fans blowing onto the GPU & CPU.....
Also comparing this to new Define R5 - still Define R5 is a winner....

P.S. I had same GPU running 65-71 Degrees in mITX RVZ01B Case which, considering the tight space requirements, is even or on pair with this case.
 
Got idle temps down to 43C after installing a higher airflow rear fan, at the expense of more noise however.
 
Last edited:
Thought I would post this in here.

excuse the poor photo quality (taken on ipad) and the rear white fan will be replaced at some point. Needed a fast rear fan to help clear out the hot air otherwise temps got out of control.

25f0to0.jpg
 
Thought I would post this in here.

excuse the poor photo quality (taken on ipad) and the rear white fan will be replaced at some point. Needed a fast rear fan to help clear out the hot air otherwise temps got out of control.

25f0to0.jpg

Hi!

Nice setup!
Your radiators are 30mm right? What type of graphics card do you have?

I am setting up a very similar setup, and I am quite concerned about dimensions. According to the official specs, if you have a 30mm rad + a 25mm fan, the graphics card could only be 265mm long, which is just a bit on the short side for the high power GPUs. However, I did find a comment on in a German review that the max dimensions are actually measured with the fan installed. I.e. you have 320mm for the GPU with a 25mm fan installed. Here is the translated version of the comment:

Thank you for your interest in our product range.

I'll tell you right away that I can not make guarantees! However, I have measured it once: a 280 mm radiator (if it is not too large for connecting part has) should be good to install more or less. I have taken here the Corsair H110 as a basis. In the moment when the radiator is, however, wider or longer, you will have massive problems of space.

In addition, it is very likely in any case that you can not use any ports on the bottom of the board (SATA, USB, Audio, Front Panel ...) because they are blocked by the radiator or fan.

The maximum overall length of VGA cards on our website is inclusive of front mounted fan - so if you install a 30 mm thick radiator in the front, a maximum of 290 mm still available if you install only one set of fans.

If you work in push-pull mode, you end up with a maximum of 265 mm - and these values assume that the power hookups NOT be found at the back of the card sind.

Ich hope that you the weiterhilft.

Mit friendly Grüßen-- Name entfernt--

Based on the pictures in post #10, I would say that this appears to be correct.

The MSI GTX970 Gaming is 269mm long, the rad is 30mm thick, and the fan is 25mm thick. If you have 345mm total, this kinda adds up:

345 - 25 - 30 = 290mm to spare for the GPU
The gap between the radiator and the GPU in Post #10 could very well be 20mm.

It really does appear that something has been lost in translation between the manufacturer, and absolutely all reviews I have read so far (German, English and Polish). On the Jonsbo page it states that you have 320mm if your remove the fan, but according to the measurements you would actually have 320mm with one fan included.
 
The total from the back PCI slots to the front with no fan in is 340mm by my measurement.

My GPU is a R9 290 and with the rad and the fan at the front I have 16mm gap between the end of the card and the radiator.

If you need any other measurements let me know.
 
The total from the back PCI slots to the front with no fan in is 340mm by my measurement.

My GPU is a R9 290 and with the rad and the fan at the front I have 16mm gap between the end of the card and the radiator.

If you need any other measurements let me know.
Excellent. That is just perfect. I am going for an R9 290/290X aswell. Now I now it will fit. Would suck to order the chassis just to discover that it is too small :)

One more measurement would be nice, what is the clearance between the motherboard and the radiator? Both horizontal and vertical clearance would be very nice, as I have a different motherboard. Looks to be a very close fit, but are you be able to use the connectors at the bottom of the motherboard?
 
Needed a fast rear fan to help clear out the hot air otherwise temps got out of control.

25f0to0.jpg
Are those fans on the radiators blowing the hot air in to the case?
 
Excellent. That is just perfect. I am going for an R9 290/290X aswell. Now I now it will fit. Would suck to order the chassis just to discover that it is too small :)

One more measurement would be nice, what is the clearance between the motherboard and the radiator? Both horizontal and vertical clearance would be very nice, as I have a different motherboard. Looks to be a very close fit, but are you be able to use the connectors at the bottom of the motherboard?

I don't have an exact measurement with the radiator I have in the bottom now as its just impossible to get anything in there to measure with but its really really tight, I cannot use my USB 3.0 header on my motherboard as there isn't room. The power switch connectors and USB 2 headers are fine though. Just install them first before putting the radiator in.

I have a couple of pictures from when I tried using a really think rad in the bottom of the case which should hopefully give you a better idea of clearances.

w7y8wo.jpg


2zz46eg.jpg
 
Back
Top