


Once you remove the panels, you’ll get a real sense for where the weight comes from. Each panel weighs a ton while the chassis (sans panels) isn’t that heavy at all. The mesh filters on the inside of the panels are designed to be removable for cleaning by removing 7 screws per panel. For those who want to ditch the plastic, the plastic fairing can be removed via screws as well, although the panels do look pretty ugly afterwards.




The first thing that jumps out at you when looking at the motherboard side of the case is the embossed crossbar with black plastic card keepers attached. It does not appear to be structurally critical to the chassis as it merely slots into the rear panel and affixes to the 5.25” bay cage via two thumbscrews, so I would gather that this can be left out if you don’t want it in there. The card-keepers are rubber-tipped plastic and ratchet down to press against the edge of whatever PCI card you have installed – useful if your case gets moved around a lot.


The floor of the motherboard chamber is broken up with two vents for the dual180mm fans as well as a cable pass-through hole for PSU cabling. With the drives being placed well away and not impeding motherboard/VGA airflow (from the rear 180mm fan), this should ensure that temperatures remain much cooler than in an average system.



The 3.5” drive cage is populated with six removable plastic drive caddies that include vibration dampening mounts. These are standard fare for Silverstone’s other offerings that include hot-swap functionality. When removed you get a good sense of the amount of ventilation that the cage offers. Above this, any 5.25” drives are secured by Silverstone’s “rocker”-type locking switches. These work equally well for full length drives and shorter bay devices without rails being needed – a pair of pins pop out to secure the drive via its standard mounting holes.


The top two drive bays can be used immediately, for any others, steel blanks need removal. The cables for the top I/O ports are of a decent length to be run behind the motherboard tray before installation elsewhere and will not affect 5.25: drive installation.

The top of the case is pretty much what you would expect from any other Silverstone case – Standard, quiet 120mm fan and Aeroslot PCI covers



The inside back panel has nothing much of note apart from a single silver screw and pair of tubing pass-through grommets – neither of which are visible from the outside. Silverstone include a set of steel radiator mounts with the RV01 enabling mounting of a 3x120mm radiator onto the rear of the case. All that is required is that that screw be removed, allowing the plastic back panel to come off; exposing the mount points and grommets.



Behind the motherboard tray, there is plenty of room for cable runs. The motherboard tray has four rubber-edged pass-through holes and four integrated cable clips (sleeved in heatshrink to prevent cutting) There are threaded holes for almost every motherboard mounting scenario, but as a consequence, there is no space for holes allowing third party CPU cooler retention plate access.

To the rear of the hot-swap bays, a single hot-swap cable is installed – this is different to the CP05 ones that can be purchased separately as it allows the cable to exit at 90 degrees from the connector as opposed to straight out the back.



The dual 180mm fans draw their air from the meshed side panel vents and are mounted in plastic holders that are easily removed via four screws each.



There is unfortunately no option to swap these out to 120mm ones (as was seen in the FT01 case), which would be useful for easy internal radiator mounting options.

There is also a strange piece of plastic placed about where you would expect the PSU to sit in the case. At a guess, this is to help support the upper of the case and perhaps add in some tortional rigidity when a PSU is installed.


The PSU sits on top of two raised rubber vibration dampening strips. With a top-mounted fan PSU, this can be flipped to draw air in through from the base. The grill is covered by a removable, narrow air filter; accessible from the outside rear of the case. The front most intake filter simply clips out for easy cleaning.

Unlike the FT01, the Raven chassis is predominantly riveted together; the only screws used in the construction are really to attach plastic parts (front panel, fan holders, PSU-support-thingy and rear panel cover). If you want to get stuck into modding this, you’ll need a drill to take it apart fully.
Speaking of taking it apart, the front panel can be removed to expose the door mechanism which runs on two vertical tracks.

Coiled, spring steel is used to provide resistance as well as closing it all up. After removing a heap more screws, the whole assembly comes off revealing a nice spot for making dremel holes – There’s actually room in the bottom chamber for a front mounted 120mm fan intake as well as another space available above it if you are prepared to sacrifice a couple of drives.
