Removing the tempered glass panel exposes the Infinity X115 GT’s internals to the world, and it looks exceptionally orderly in fairness. Not only are the 24-pin and USB 3.0 header cables neatly tucked away, the fan cables and even the 8-pin PCI-Express connector are as discreet as possible. Cyberpower continues to impress with their attention to detail on assembly.
This tighter shot shows the roof and zone immediately surrounding the CPU. Again the cables are neatly pinned away, and there’s room in the roof for a slim 240mm radiator and fans. Just a shame that the CPU cooler is so plain, but as you’ll see swapping it out wouldn’t pose too much of a problem.
Pre-installed in the rear 120mm position is one of the three included Cooler Master MF120 HALO ARGB fans.
The M.2 SSD is covered by a heatspreader which is stuck to the drive with adhesive. Having that heatspreader installed is certainly opportune in this case as the Intel 670p has a green rather than black PCB, but replacing it without damaging the drive will be tricky.
Tucked away below the GPU is a compact wireless network card, occupying the second single-lane PCIe slot. The first single-lane slot is obscured by the GPU cooler on the B560M PRO (and would be on the B560M-A PRO), but both are shifted down one on the B560M PRO VDH; as a result this configuration doesn’t have any additional options for PCIe expandability, but one equipped with the more costly motherboard would.
A peek behind the motherboard tray with the side panel removed lets Cyberpower gloat over their tidy cable management once again. It makes the best of the few cable tie standoffs available on the tray and ensures that adding to the cabling won’t necessitate undoing all of their hard work.
This also exposes the large motherboard tray cut-out that will make swapping out the CPU cooler pretty trivial. No need to remove the motherboard, just get the cooler back-plate in place and you should be golden. Credit to Cooler Master for that design tweak which doesn’t also impact the rigidity of the case itself.
The Cooler Master fan hub is powered by a SATA power connector and can accommodate up to six 4-pin 12V PWM fans with separate ARGB pinout. The ARGB and PWM control is set by single motherboard PWM and ARGB headers; the controller handles passing the signalling off to each connected fan, but does also mean that each fan will have an identical lighting pattern.
At the bottom next to the PSU is a small drive cage for two HDDs that’s also removable if using a radiator in the front.
In operation, and the lighting scheme set to a rainbow effect rather than the default colour scheme, this is the sort of result you can expect. The lighting is well balanced with two in the front and one in the rear, while the mesh front panel also cuts out a lot of the glare from the fan LEDs; it can be an excellent complement to the rest of an illuminated setup, but might not be the centrepiece some more fully equipped desktops could be.
Other than these three fans there is no internal illumination in the Infinity X115 GT, not even the graphics card. That means it’s also a blank canvas to add you own, or keep as-is if preferred.