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NZXT H1 Version 2 - CS-H11BW-US - Small Form-Factor ITX Case - Dual Chamber Airflow - Tinted Tempered Glass Front Panel - 140mm Liquid Cooler - SFX 750W 80+ Gold PSU - PCIe Gen4 Riser - White

  • Based on 177 reviews
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Availability: Only 4 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by CtSales

Arrives Saturday, Jul 26
Order within 21 hours and 55 minutes
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Color: White


Pattern Name: ITX Case


Features

  • POWERFULLY SMALL: The compact vertical design provides a small footprint while maintaining support for most full-sized GPUs on the market.
  • A SIMPLE BUILD: The toolless SSD tray and riser card are incredibly simple to install. In addition to pre-routed cables, the motherboard I/O faces down, routing all cables through the bottom of the case.
  • INTEGRATED COMPONENTS: Integrated power supply and AIO liquid cooler provide a better build experience, along with pre-routed cables. An integrated PCIe Riser card is also included for vertical GPU mounting.
  • ELEGANT AIRFLOW : The dual-chamber airflow is thermally designed to allow the CPU, GPU, and PSU to pull in fresh air, and exhaust hot air without affecting temperatures of neighboring components.
  • VERSION 2 EXCLUSIVE : The increased chassis size provides support for larger GPUs. Other upgrades include upgraded PSU wattage, an added fan controller, and an PCIe Gen4 Riser.

Description

The all-new NZXT H1 provides a beautifully small vertical chassis, maintaining full-sized GPU compatibility. The building experience is streamlined, with pre-routed cable channels and an integrated PSU and AIO liquid cooler. The dual-chamber exhaust layout maintains superior cooling for the CPU and GPU, providing each with a dedicated air source.

Brand: NZXT


Color: White


Material: Tempered Glass


Cooling Method: Water


Item Dimensions LxWxH: 0.39 x 0.39 x 0.5 inches


Hard Disk Form Factor: 3.5 Inches


Brand: ‎NZXT


Item model number: ‎CS-H11BW-US


Item Weight: ‎17.81 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎0.39 x 0.39 x 0.5 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎0.39 x 0.39 x 0.5 inches


Color: ‎White


Manufacturer: ‎NZXT


Date First Available: ‎January 26, 2022


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Jul 26

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I like a lot of it, but a lot gets lost in the details
Color: Black Pattern Name: ITX Case
Bottom line up front: it's a well-built, well-designed case, let down in the end by the details for the price they are charging. I read all the reviews and watched all the popular YouTube videos before taking the dive on this case. I paid $360 (now it's $299 a month and a half later after I could return it to Amazon for the lower price of course). At $360 (or list of $399) after 2 months, it would probably be a 'no buy', but at $299 it would be back in the 'consider' category. The best things about it is the tall form factor for which I wish there were other options to cross-shop. My setup is pretty modest to high-end, with an Asus ROG Strix Z790, an Intel 13600k, 2 sticks of Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5, and a 1TB Samsung 980 Pro. My graphics card is an EVGA 3060 Ti that has a ton of room. Overall, the performance of the machine is fine and the thermals are good for what I use it for: driving 2 2k monitors for heavy productivity work and modest gaming (WoW, Civ, roll playing games, etc., not much into the FPS crowd these days). I'll use the same format as some others but try to distinguish my review from there's as both someone who is a long-time PC builder and has now lived with this case for 2 months and has had a couple of interactions with NZXT support. Overall, the form factor is very nice and just what I expected. I went in wanting to build an mATX build coming from an Intel NUC Extreme before. So footprint was a concern. The Coolermaster NR200P Max was my other consideration. I didn't go that way because 1) that case is more expensive and 2) it's more a traditional layout that would have taken up more space on my desk or floor where the NZXT sits in the back corner under my desk and doesn't get in the way. In the end, the cost was the wrong consideration as the NZXT actually ended up costing me MORE than the Coolermaster and would have probably had none of the compromises I'll list below in the cons section beyond the footprint. My next computer for my daughter in the fall will likely be the Coolermaster. Don't think I would buy this case again in its current configuration. That leaves the form factor as the primary win. Pros: - The upright, tower footprint is excellent and really does work well. This is my favorite part of this case TBH. - The included 750W PSU is sufficient in size for most of what this rig can run short of the really big 4090 Nvidia cards, which likely won't fit anyhow due to the additional width issues. - Overall build quality of the case is pretty good. The parts fit together well, are machined well, and I had no issues, in general, worrying about cutting myself, rubbing up against things, etc. The tool-less design with access in and out is really nice, and for the most part, you only need a screwdriver for securing the motherboard to the tray and making sure the water block mount is tight. - For my build, it does really well on thermals. Even doing heavy productivity work, the fans never come off idle in silent mode and the PC runs around 40C for both the CPU and the GPU. Under gaming load, when the GPU is running at 100% load CPU temps are pretty much in the mid-to-high 60s and the GPU is usually around 75-80C. All well within any throttling limits even over very long gaming sessions. With a bigger card, more powerful CPU, etc. those might creep up of course, but I've seen YT folks running overclocked 13900k with similar results. So cooling in general isn't an issue. - Lastly, building in the case is overall not as bad as most of us it seems considered it might be. So props to NZXT on that front for building a SFF case that is generally easy to work in. - It has a decent warranty at 3 years on the case and riser card and 10 years for the included PSU. Neutrals/Things to know: - The overall Z height between the motherboard mounts and the cooler fan is a few mm's shorter than I expected. The ROG Strix Z790 also has a LOT of Z height with multiple cooler stacks, a stacked multi-deck NVMe setup, and the vertical front panel card that you pretty much need to use. This would be fine EXCEPT the cooler cables are pretty thick and to keep the case organization clean, also fairly short. They can only be routed out the left or right of the motherboard space. For my build, this space isn't wide enough nor are the hoses long enough to route around the tall components on the board which causes me to run them over the VRM heatsink on the top of the board which provides a bit of pressure to both the water cooler hose and downward pressure on the MB. Some people will find this a no-go from the start due to this interference. I find it 'acceptable' given the very light deflection, the high quality and number of layers of the ASUS board, and the fact that the cooler water cables are pretty rigid and not being collapsed. But if you have a board like mine with a lot of Z height around the CPU slot, be aware. - That Z height could also be an issues for really tall sticks of RAM. The Corsair RAM I bought is on what I'd consider the slightly taller and fatter side and it JUST fits. You can't really put the memory in before you mount the motherboard either, as you need it out of the way to access the cable connectors to the front of the MB. - On that same front, I haven't had any clearance issues with the waterblock, but I did see a few reports of some issues in rare circumstances. - It has a few basic fan controller. Given all the headers on the typical motherboard, I'm not sure that's a plus or a minus. But it's non-expandable if you feel you need to add more fans, etc. - There isn't a ton of room in this case for RGB or the space to add an RGB controller either. I wasn't worried about either of these, but for some might be an issue. - Case connectivity on the top panel is 'okay'. I think most of use these days would prefer a second USB C/Thunderbolt connector vs 2 USB-A. - $399 is expensive for what you get, $299 is a better deal but still kinda on the expensive side in my opinion after the cons section below. - If you want to control the fan speeds, you have to run NZXT CAM. CAM though can't control the fan speed in the PSU or the AIO speed. It reports the AIO speed, but there is nothing you can do about it. CAM is pretty basic as well. - The included instruction 'manual' is a large fan-fold sheet of paper. It's about as basic as it comes and if you are not a semi-experienced builder, you will likely find it inadequate and find yourself searching YT, etc. for build videos. - This thing pumps out a LOT of heat for the size to get that nice cooling, all on the back. It's nice as a foot warmer under my desk. - What the case gives up in depth it more than makes up for in height. This may encourage you to put it on the floor, as I did. And with the motherboard access facing down you are suddenly likely to find yourself with all your cables about 6 inches too short unless you had extra length before. This can be cheap to fix (USB extension cables) or more expensive (replace all your DisplayPort cables at $20-$40 a piece). SFF builds can get expensive..... Cons: - The power button light is SUPER bright and SUPER white with no way to adjust the brightness, etc. I cover is up to be honest as it's SO bright. - The cooling is good, but it comes at the expense of noise. There are enough moving parts in this case that you are likely to find something that annoys you if you are noise-sensitive or don't work with headphones all the time. Some are correctable, others maybe not, and all are expensive relative to the money you've already put into the case. I don't find the case fans annoying, but many do. If you do, add on more money to replace one or both the case and AIO fan. - Same with the AIO pump. I have the header hooked to the AIO header on my motherboard and let it run the pump in quiet mode so it runs at 2k most of the time and only the 4k speed under load. At 4k all the time, it's not inaudible. Though others find it more annoying than I do in my situation. Same with the large AIO fan. If you don't have an AIO header, you're stuck with 4k all the time and whatever that noise does for you. - For me, the included PSU turned out to be my noise problem. NXZT advertises it as 'silent', I find it anything but. The first PSU was fine for most day-to-day tasks without making any/a lot of noise. But after a gaming session, when the PSU fan was spinning higher (not unexpected), it would then make a surging sound like the fan was speeding up and slowing down in the PSU over and over again until the system settled into a lower cooling level. NZXT sent me a new one (after waiting almost 2 weeks for me to return the one I had and wait for the new one, more on that in a minute). The new one is even worse than the old one, surging now after I even watch several back-to-back YT videos. NZXT now claims this is a normal operation and they are sorry, but that's just how it's designed. When I went and returned it the first time, I couldn't be without my computer for 2 weeks so I bought the highly regarded Corsair 750w SFF PSU. What a difference. That PSU also spins up during gaming load, but it runs without the surging, etc. and it's ROCK solid. I paid $179 for it though, which is a pretty penny for a PSU and makes this overall case almost $500 before I even think about any other fan replacements. Thank god they are all okay. - If you have a warranty issue, props to NZXT for paying for shipping for the part both ways. However, they won't send you the new part until they receive your old one, leaving your rig down for multiple days or you contemplating the ethicality of buying a replacement part just to think about returning it when the warranty part returns. Support was generally responsive, so that part was at least good though it's all through e-mail. - Did I mention that SDD builds can get expensive? ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2023 by MichaelJ

  • Beautiful case
Color: White Pattern Name: ITX Case
Buying of this case was an experiment for me. I wanted to make my home PC much more compact, leaving some of the old hardware. Yes, I realized that the new case would be noisier, but now mobility is more important to me, and I didn’t want to buy a laptop. It's not the smallest case ever, first I wanted Fractal Design Ridge, but my videocard can't fit there. NZXT is bigger but looks pretty nice. Love it. To my surprise, the quality of the case and ease of assembly were excellent. My ASUS RTX 3090 ROG STRIX fit right in. I also was surprised, but NZXT power supply was enough and did not have to be changed. In addition, water cooling worked great on my Ryzen 9 3900x, temperatures in stress tests are fine. I switched the video card to quiet mode so that it would not make noise like an airplane. And I’m quite satisfied, everything works like a charm. In addition, the case is very beautiful and I admire it all the time. Just compare old and new cases 🤣 ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2023 by Artem Artem

  • There’s a lot to like and not much to dislike
Color: White Pattern Name: ITX Case
Overall a pretty good, if novel, case. If you’re really into the look & footprint, it’s probably better than you would expect. It was for me. Cons: - access to some fasteners is tight, e.g. the GPU case mount screws - especially with recent price-hike ($349 -> $399 at time of writing), the value just barely scrapes by… definitely not worth it for most people unless you really really need a small footprint. - would have liked space for 1 or two more fans. I’ve seen several mods of this case that can achieve that. I’m not asking for more fans, just more mounting areas - The joints for the access door to the power cables is really janky, not a solid connection, slips off inadvertently sometimes when being opened (otherwise it’s solid when closed) - Installing a large GPU can be slightly more difficult than a normal layout case - instruction manual is pretty lacking. Just got a single, map-style diagram. It’s not missing anything, necessarily, but a parts list & explanations would be helpful - proprietary pump connector is only controllable through proprietary NZXT Cam software (this isn’t too big a deal since the only real point would be to monitor the RPMs to make sure it’s still working). Neutrals: - Cooling is just okay, replaced with be quiet! Silent Wings 4 high speed 140mm, now cooling is way better - noise level of the provided NZXT fans is pretty annoying, but not unbearable, replaced with better ones - there’s like 2 spots to put some tiny fans for better cooling - some mods are available from 3rd parties to replace things like the panels with different designs/cooling considerations - 750W power supply is plenty for most use-cases. I have upgraded fans, a 3090, a 5800X3D, and 3 SSDs and have never had a problem. But I’d like to see a 1000W option available for the newer hardware that’s coming out. - Top (front) I/O is okay, would like to see one more USB-C even if it replaced the second USB-A. Pros: - as advertised, takes up a tiny amount of space - not as difficult to work with as I expected (I’ve opened it up several times after the initial build to tinker with it) - paint job is nice, materials are high quality. Did a scratch test on the inside of the back panel and it held up under reasonable pressure, just don’t go too crazy - glass front with barely visible NZXT logo is very nice imho - I really like the tool-less removable panels makes minor internal adjustments a breeze - Everything came packed well in the box (most stuff was inside the case itself which is a nice touch) - dust filters are magnetic and super easy to remove ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2022 by Tectix

  • Great Case!
Color: White Pattern Name: ITX Case
Super easy to build in since cables are already managed and ready for plug in. The small improvements over the V1 do make a difference. The 140 AIO works pretty good considering it's size and the upgraded wattage of the PSU helps give some overhead for newer graphics cards. Only downside to the case is the PSU is on the louder side. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2023 by Michael

  • simple to make but great quality
Color: Black Pattern Name: ITX Case
If you want to make a smaller desktop computer, then this case will be perfect. The quality of all the parts is very high yet very easy to build in. It includes the power and even a water cooler which is a big plus. My only complaint is the front panel should be mesh and not glass. The cables are already mostly managed which is great for me to make things easier. I love this case a lot. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2023 by Bruce Hamaty

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