Fractal Design didn’t just add another fan mount to the Pop 2 Air where the original Pop Air had a pair of drive bays: It also added a third fan mount to its top panel. Even the top panel’s vent has been upgraded, with perforated sheet metal of similar thickness to its other panels. That takes the place of the weak mesh screen that covered the smaller two-fan top vent of the original version.
The Pop Air 2 is also available in black for the same $99 price as our white sample. As noted, our review unit is the TG RGB, which has RGB fans; you can get the case without RGB for $10 less. As for the “TG” part? The non-RGB black version is available with or without a tempered-glass side, for the same $89 price.
A closeup of the top panel’s ports gets us a look at the perforated top fan cover, which is the same thickness as the side panel. It’s stuck on with the same kind of magnetic strips as the screen that covered the original Pop Air.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
The ports are also carried over from the original, which is a ding on this case. That’s because the USB-port design forces PC builders to live with a 5Gbps maximum speed on the Type-C port, since that port shares a 19-pin USB 3 connector with the Type-A port. (Most modern cases use a separate Type-E 10Gbps connection for any Type-C ports.) We also see a headset combo jack, a pair of mode buttons for the integrated RGB controller, and an RGB-backlit power button.
The Pop 2 Air has but one dust filter, and it’s only big enough to cover the air inlet for the power supply. That makes the mesh filter over the front panel the case’s main intake charge, for better or worse.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
A pattern of vents adjacent to the motherboard I/O panel is designed to accept a rear fan at various distances above the graphics card or below the top panel, depending on where you’re trying to gain more clearance. The PCI Express expansion slot panel below it can hold up to seven cards or multi-slot cards without obstruction, since there aren’t any metal bridges between the slots.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
The right side panel is solid (non-perforated) sheet steel. Pulling off the panels, we find mounting pins for two 2.5-inch drives behind the motherboard tray, an ARGB controller integrated with the port connectors, a dual-pattern radiator mount pressed into the top panel, a removable 3.5-inch drive cage inside the power supply tunnel, and a card-tab access hole that allays any concerns about angling a graphics card into place by being a full 30mm high.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
The top panel can hold radiators at least 408mm long (or a bit more, if you can get the ends to clear various obstructions near the top edges of the front and rear panels), but it’s only around 30mm above the motherboard. A horizontal distance of around 52mm between the motherboard surface and any 120mm-wide cooling components should allow most 360mm-format radiator/fan sets to clear most memory modules, but we’d be warier of 140mm-wide units.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
The case’s included ARGB controller does not offer a passive mode, so builders are forced to choose between it and whatever other ARGB controllers their system has. (There’s usually one on modern motherboards.) It has two buttons that cycle through four lighting patterns and six colors for a combination of 24 possible effects.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
As for mounting SSDs and hard drives, plastic push pins secure two 2.5-inch drives up top, while the 3.5-inch drive bay on the bottom secures that hard drive via four shoulder screws on silicon grommets. The lower tray can also hold a third 2.5-inch drive, but without the benefit of damping grommets.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
Then there’s the fans. The three specially designed Fractal Design ARGB fans have extended rings on the frames that protrude through corresponding holes on the Pop 2 Air’s front panel and fascia. Though standard fans will fit here too, the extra space between fan frames (around 2mm) makes radiator installation a little less certain.
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(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
With the Pop 2 Air, you might not have even thought that a front radiator would be an option, given its curved lower duct, visible below, that’s designed to direct the lower fan’s air up toward your installed graphics card. But we immediately noticed the little screw in the corner of that duct…
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
…which makes it appear as though the case might have been designed to hold an optional cooling kit that contained a different duct. Removing the screw and the duct gives us access to a radiator-mounting space that’s more than 420mm tall, despite being limited to three 120mm fans.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
As for graphics card and motherboard space, we found Fractal Design’s 416mm maximum card-length rating realistic, and we measured more than 11 inches (280mm) of space between the expansion panel and the motherboard tray’s inward step. That’s enough space to fit the 9.7-to-10.8-inch enthusiast-class motherboards that often get saddled with the loose “EATX” label, but not enough to fit some bigger workstation-class boards that also qualify as EATX.
(Credit: Thomas Soderstrom)
