The internal chassis support is not removable, but does provide a good cable tidy option and is a substantial support for the rest of the structure. It may not suit some, but it’s going to stop chassis flex and squeak, not to mention bending your components when you are moving your system around.
Test Build
We didn’t include an optical drive as we don’t really use them anymore. Just as we did with the Nanoxia Deep Silence 1 Rev.B Chassis review, we used some of our current test components, including a Zotac Amp GTX980 Ti and the fresh and the new ASRock Z170 Extreme4.
- Processor: Intel i7-6700K
- Motherboard: ASRock Z170 Extreme4
- Graphics: Zotac Amp GTX980 Ti
- Memory: 16GB Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 2666Mhz
- Drives: Samsung SM951 512GB M.2
- 2x Crucial MX200 500Gb SSD
- Cooler: Gelid Antarctica
- PSU: EVGA 850W SuperNOVA G2
On with the test build shots;
We used a tall CPU cooler, the Gelid Antarctica, and it fits well. The rest of the components are sized just right for this chassis, and the Zotac Amp GTX980 Ti has no issues.
Cooltek CT GT-04 Mid-Tower Chassis Review
Packaging - 7
Features - 8
Build - 8.5
Component Compatibility - 8
Price - 8.5
Consumer Experience - 8
8
It also has some good features to get you going, it's a bit of an all in one chassis with a card reader, an external drive dock and a fan controller all built in. It is not a Nanoxia Deep Silence 1 Rev.B level chassis, but it is not far off for some of the specifications, and stripped bare, you could be forgiven for thinking the Cooltek CT GT-04 is a higher end chassis for a low price.