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Originally Posted by easyg
ATX form factor cases were designed to provide maximum air flow to the CPU socket.
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This was true,
in 1995. That is when the ATX platform was first released by Intel. However, by 2000 the ATX was showing it's age. Most cases of that era (and sadly a large number sold today) either had no extra fans, or they were placed in locations where they did very little good.
BTX was released 4 years ago to try and help things. The CPU was moved to the front of the case, and other components were moved so the hottest things were in the front. However, the form factor was a failure. Only a year after it was released, Intel dropped it.
It is true that a properly cooled case is far cooler with the sides closed. Opening the sides only helps if you have a case that lacks proper cooling.
One thing I constantly tell people is to not go cheap when buying their case. Make sure it has a high enough wattage power supply, and sufficient cooling for the processor and accessories they plan on useing.
And if you want to be sure you are not overheating, spend an extra $30 or so for a temperature panel with at least 3-4 temperature probes. Place 1 in the CPU heatsink, one on the Graphics Card heatsink, and the last two either in the Chipset Heatsink and/or alongside the hard drive.
In a properly cooled case, these temperatures should normally run within 20 degrees (F) of your ambient room temperature at idle. If any of these components are running hotter, you want to install supplimental cooling to bring it back down. You also want to add more cooling if your ambient room temperature averages above 85 degrees (F).