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Lian Li LANCOOL 215 Mesh Black Tempered Glass ATX Case -Black Color -LANCOOL 215

  • Based on 2,687 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Oct 26 – Nov 3
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Style: LANCOOL 215 X BLACK


Pattern Name: Case


Features

  • Two pre-installed 200MM RGB fans and a 120MM fan
  • Mesh panel- intakes spanning the front panel guarantee sufficient airflow in and out of the system.
  • Honeycomb vents enable efficient ventilation.
  • Multi cooling sSupports a maximum of 7 fans and radiators in various sizes and configurationsystems support
  • Multi cooling systems support

Description

Style:LANCOOL 215 X BLACK | Pattern Name:Case Dimensions: (D) 462mm x (W) 215mm x (H) 482mm Motherboard: E-ATX(width: under 280mm)/ATX/M-ATX/ITX PSU: 210mm Color: black Materials: 0.75mm SGCC (MB tray, and most of the interior) 4.0mm tempered glass (both sides) Fan Support: Front : 2 x 200mm or 2 x 140mm or 3 x 120mm / Top: 2 x 120 or 140mm / Rear: 1 x 120mm Radiator: Front : 1 x 360/280mm / Top: 1 x 280/240mm VGA Length: 370mm CPU Clearance: 160mm Drive: Behind MB Tray: 2 x 2.5″ SSD / Hard Drive Cage: 2 x 3.5″ HDD or 1 x 2.5″ SSD Slot: 7 I/O Ports: LED button for lighting mode control / 1 x TRRS AUDIO / 2 x USB 3.0 Dust Filters: 1 x Top (magnetic), 1 x Bottom (tray) Incl. Fans: 2 x included 200mm 3-PIN 800RPM ARGB Fans (front top) 1 x 120mm 1000RPM Fans (rear top)


Brand: ‎Lian Li


Series: ‎LANCOOL 215


Item model number: ‎LANCOOL 215


Item Weight: ‎17.6 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎21.5 x 11.5 x 21 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎21.5 x 11.5 x 21 inches


Color: ‎Black


Manufacturer: ‎LIAN LI


Date First Available: ‎October 19, 2020


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Oct 26 – Nov 3

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.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Quality. Best bang for buck.
Style: LANCOOL 2 Black Pattern Name: Case
Cannot believe the features that come with this sub $100 case. My fastest build yet due to not needing tools for much of the build. I think my favorite features are the drive sleds, ability to cycle led from front IO, the easy cable management and of course the double hinged tempered glass doors. Incredible flexibility. In my attempt to be objective the only two things I could say negative is that I wish there was a press to open for the two glass doors and it is a heavy case (cause it’s made of quality steel). I plan to buy this case again while it is still available. UPDATE: I just bought this case again! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2020 by BuckBanzai

  • Excellent quality and fantastic value
Style: LANCOOL 2 Black Pattern Name: Case
I can't believe that this cost only $95. I just can't believe it. Lian Li can't be making any money off of these. I've been eyeing this one since it came out, and now that they're finally getting into stock after the initial sellout, I quickly picked one up. I thought it would be a good deal, but I was still shocked at how good it truly is for the money. This case should easily have cost in the $150-$200 range at least. The case is quite heavy. It's almost entirely steel with a few small plastic pieces - construction is both precise and very solid. The Lian Li quality is definitely there - this is not a cheapo case, and I don't really see anywhere that they obviously cut corners. It was a breeze to build in. Everything is easily accessible. You can open up all panels and get to pretty much anything. Fan installation was a breeze with the removable front fan bracket. The drive cage is movable so that you can either make room for radiator support or fit a large PSU in there and have room for cables. There are lots of mounting points for SSDs, and the 3x hard drive cage is easy to use. The front panel easily pops right off and on, and the RGB is connected using prongs - no wires. The only minor issue I had was that I had to use extensions for the fan cables to get them to the bottom of my motherboard, but that's a minor issue and if you're using a fan hub of some type not an issue at all. Cable management... What cable management? It comes with zip ties and some velcro ties included, but you don't even really need them. The cable cover panels on the back side are **GREAT**. I literally just shoved all of the exposed cables into the PSU shroud and under the cable cover plates and viola, cleanest build I've ever done. This is a zero-effort cable-management case, and I love it. Thermals are better than what some reviewers have said (looking at you, Gamers Nexus Steve). It comes with 3 - 120mm fans, and despite what some reviewers said they don't seem loud at all to me. I moved the front fan to the top for exhaust and put 2 -140mm Phanteks fans in there for intake, and I got decent thermals with that 5x fan setup. I'm running a stock Ryzen 7 3700X with Wraith Prism and got around 77C running a stress test - not bad at all, since the R7 is rated to 95C. My idle temps are hovering in the 38C to 40C range. Good enough for some overclocking headroom. If you're using liquid you won't have any issues either, as this case is very rad-friendly. The RGB is very nice, too. I'm reducing the amount of RGB in my builds now and I think that this is just the right amount, with a surprisingly large array of options for colors and modes available from the front panel controller. I haven't gotten any of the optional accessories yet but I'll probably pick up the hot swap back plate, as hot swapping hard drives is something I'd actually do with this build. I very much appreciate that Lian Li made those optional and didn't include them by default, as that helps bring the cost for the base unit down substantially while also allowing the user to tailor those options to their use case and budget. Overall I'm not really seeing any cons here. I'm truly amazed that this is available at this price point. It's a premium case at a mid-range price. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2020 by K. Burke

  • The Good, The Bad, And A Suggestion
Style: LANCOOL 2 Black Pattern Name: Case
I bought this tower to port existing components over from a full size tower that I found was somewhat lacking in the ventilation department. The build is as follows: • Lian Li Lancool II mid-size tower (obviously) • MSI Z390 Gaming Pro Carbon AC motherboard • Intel I9-9900K processor • Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 3200 (PC4-25600) Desktop Memory (plan on adding another 32GB) • Corsair H100i RGB Platinum AIO Liquid CPU Cooler • EVGA Supernova 850 G5 80 Plus Gold 850W Power Supply • EVGA Geforce RTX 2060 Super XC Gaming 8GB GDDR6, Dual Fans, RGB LED, Metal Backplate, and Powerlink • Samsung SSD 860 1TB 2.5 Inch SATA III Internal SSD (boot drive) • 3 various brand HDDs totaling 7GB of data storage. • Corsair QL140 RGB case fans x 2 (front ventilation input) • Corsair QL120 RGB case fans x 3 (1 rear ventilation exhaust, 2 replace the ML120 fans on the H100i radiator) The good; • Doing the build with this tower was pretty straightforward, actually easy in some respects. • The pull down lower sides, adjustable HDD (up to 3 all of which I use) enclosure, removable front panel and side panels as well as multiple access points between the left (CPU) and right sides of the tower have much to do with the ease of the build. • Ventilation is much better all the way around with this tower (which is what I expected). The full tower it replaced consistently had temperatures across the board – CPU, memory, motherboard – that were 5 to 6 degrees Celsius higher at idle than expected (35 to 36 C for the CPU) which was a “wear and tear” concern for me. The build in the Lian Lancool II tower is actually a degree or so less than anticipated at idle (29 to 30C for the CPU) and that is with 2 140MM input fans in front, 1 120MM exhaust fan at the rear, and a 240MM liquid cooling AIO on top in the LanCool vs 2 140MM input fans in the front, 1 120MM input fan on top, 2 140MM input fans on the bottom 1 140MM exhaust fan at the rear and a 280MM liquid cooling AIO on top.in the replaced tower. I expect similar differences in temperature when the new tower is stressed. • The motherboard stand offs were perfectly placed! That is a first for me. I just placed the motherboard in place and all the screw holes on the motherboard line up perfectly with the stand offs. There were also no problems in screwing in the screws. Another first for me! • The magnetic securing of the bottom and glass side plates makes access to the inner workings much easier. By moving the HDD enclosure a little forward made the power source installation – including cabling – pretty easy. • The end result looks nice and performs well. The bad: • The right side “plates” which are supposed to hide the cabling are not workable for me with the regular thick power supply cables. The only way to use them would be to pull the power supply cables tight on that side, making the left and more viewable side look cluttered with the excess of cabling. As it is the right side glass enclosure is barely secured. I may have to do some head scratching and experimentation to improve that, but as long as it holds I will probably leave it alone. • The installation manual is pretty much a set of pictures and could be a little confusing for someone doing their first build. One thing I noticed was that the front panel RGB wiring was displayed dead wrong. The front panel does line up perfectly to the 3 male headers on the frame. There are 2 cables related to the front panel RGB. One cable is a SATA connection for power coming from the 2 RGB buttons on the front panel top and a 4 pin RGB cable coming from those buttons to be connected to the small 4 pin cable coming from the bottom of the front panel. The manual incorrectly has 1 4 pin connection going to an LED header on the motherboard. Ignore that! And connect the 2 4 pin cables as described above. • As described above the manual is a set of pictures with a one sentence description for each picture. Some are straightforward and some will leave one head scratching. Not so much a problem for me since I have done several builds in the past. • There is no HDD LED light. That was a little surprising. Not a big issue but it is always nice to know that the build’s data is being accessed. • The front panel RGB lights are kind of “blah.” There are a number of display options using the 2 RGB buttons on the top of the front panel but the results are pretty much last generation. I picked a solid blue color for the front panel and let the RGB on the motherboard, memory, case and AIO fans light up the tower. Suggestion: Since the right side of the panel is basically cabling and SSD placements, and in a perfect world, totally hidden by those metal plates; why not have the swing out panel be metal vs. glass? What is the sense of having a glass panel when all one sees is metal (or in my case a bunch of wires)? Not a major issue for me since my desktop placement (as shown in the picture) highlights the left side, just a suggestion. Overall, I do like this tower. It solved my ventilation concerns and I had no problems with the build, except for the tight fit of the right side panel. If you can live with the “pictures” in the installation manual (suggest going to the Lian website and downloading it), I recommend the tower, especially at this price point, although I do recommend investing in several fans (2 140M and 1 120MM) to replace the 3 basic 120MM fans provided. I am rating this a 4 vs a 5 for the several nitpicks described above. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2020 by OldnAchy

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