Lian Li Strimer Plus 24-pin & 8-pin Review 7

Lian Li Strimer Plus 24-pin & 8-pin Review

Colors & Animations »

A Closer Look


Similar to the original Strimer, the Plus variant utilizes a white extension cable on which the soft, individual strands sit which then light up thanks to the connector on one end. Also, while the first version had multiple clear plastic clips to hold it in place, the Strimer Plus keeps the individual strips free of any unsightly bits and pieces.


The same can be said for the 8-pin variant, which ships with two 6+2 pin connectors, so you will be able to use it with any of the potent GPUs out there these days. The ribbon cable to power the lights is skinnier on this unit because the more compact cable requires less LEDs.


The main connector is branded Lian Li on the Strimer Plus units, and the cable extrudes from the middle on the side, which means you should run into no problems with cable management, either.


The controller is now more elaborate than the original, allowing more control over the lighting effects. You have two sets of effects you can trigger with M1 and M2, while the S button adjusts the speed of the animation and the L button its brightness. After removing the four screws of the housing, you can take a look at the pretty bare PCB. That said, it comes with more ICs than the original Strimer PCB. I would have loved magnets inside the housing to easily slap the unit onto the metal frame of a case. Pair that with a way to pass-through the cables from the controller to the back of the case (along with slightly longer power/LED leads), just so users have the option to easily access animations on the fly. As it stands now, you will have to open the chassis, or use motherboard control to do so.


The system connects to the device in a clear fashion, so there is no way to mistakenly plug a cable into the wrong location. Both Strimer Plus plugs go into the top, and the bottom connections are for SATA power and LED data I/O.
Next Page »Colors & Animations
View as single page
Apr 26th, 2024 03:30 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts