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  • Greetings and today on LGR

  • weve got a delightfully silly piece of PC gaming hardware from the mid-2000s.

  • This is the Thermaltake CircleFire 5.25” Professional Multimedia Kit.

  • Er, sorry, “Muti-Mediakit.

  • Hehe, yeah...

  • So this undoubtedly professional addon is from theanything goesera of PC case

  • mods, and what better way to garner attention at a LAN party than the CircleFire!

  • It’s got dual backlit VU meters, a built-in chrome-plated speaker, two LED peak meters,

  • and a fiery hot rod paint job! [laughs] Ahh this is just perfect.

  • It was released in late 2004, no surprise there, and sold for about sixty US dollars,

  • give or take five bucks depending on which retailer you got it from.

  • And yeah, there were tons of things along these lines back then,

  • from Thermaltake and otherwise.

  • Most often drive bay kits like this were for things like controlling fan speeds, adjusting

  • case lighting colors, and adding memory card slots and the like,

  • all stuff that’s still pretty commonplace.

  • But then youve got things like the CircleFire, an addon for your sound card that not only

  • gets your PC more attention at LAN parties, but provides “a profession multi-media front

  • panel, combine speaker, dancing meters and shining LEDs.”

  • Despite the broken English and dubious build quality on first inspection, I was immediately

  • drawn to the CircleFire after covering the NewQ Gold graphic equalizer a while back.

  • I’ve always found these drive bay addons particular amusing,

  • especially those that involve audio in some capacity.

  • And really, show me something with stereo VU meters and/or peak displays, and my interest

  • is immediately piqued regardless.

  • The fact that it slides into a 5.25” drive bay just takes it to the next amusingly nerdy

  • level for me, so yeah, let’s open this up and see whatcha get!

  • First up is the A1994 CircleFire unit itself, which is a good bit shorter in length than

  • an optical drive and much lighter in weight at just 310 grams.

  • Though the enclosure is all metal so that’s nice.

  • The component box is next, which is indeed a box of components.

  • Including a bag of mounting screws, a metal PCI slot bracket, and a couple of audio cables.

  • One for analog CD audio,

  • and the other for plugging into your sound card’s 3.5mm audio jack.

  • This bracket though, this confuses me somewhat.

  • The cutouts match the back of the CircleFire and it has screw mounts that could hold a

  • small PCB, but obviously that’s not what youre supposed to do here.

  • So let’s check the user’s manual real quick and, well.

  • It seems they do want you to use the bracket, but only as a spot to thread the 3.5” audio

  • cable through to reach your sound card.

  • Seriously.

  • Yeah, the idea is that you plug both cables into the back of the main unit here, with

  • this one going to your CD-ROM’s 4-pin audio header and this stereo cable going through

  • this horizontal cut-out on the bracket and into your sound card’s audio output.

  • [chuckles] Oh Thermaltake, why.

  • My guess is that they had a bunch of these brackets already for some other project,

  • so they said screw it. Good enough!

  • Anyway, at this point the installation is dead simple

  • but I guess I’ll show it because why not.

  • If only to look inside the LGR Dream XP Build once again, which has already been upgraded

  • with the Sound Blaster X-Fi Platinum and its own lovely drive bay expansion.

  • Unfortunately I’m outta drive bays at this point, so well just take out the DVD drive

  • for now, which is fine since these don’t even have an analog audio header so there’d

  • be nothing for that cable to plug into anyway.

  • And yeah, turns out it was quite an unusually tight fit getting the CircleFire into the

  • drive bay, like it’s about a couple millimeters too large or something.

  • The only thing left to do now is to install that cheap metal bracket, string the audio

  • cable through the system, and finally connect it to the X-Fi card.

  • Tada.

  • Ugh, yeah no.

  • I gave it a shot, but looking at this configuration hurts my very soul.

  • Besides, I’ve got these nice little rubber openings on this case so I’m just gonna

  • use those and put my original bracket back in place

  • so it actually looks kinda sorta half-decent.

  • And with that, it’s time to power it on for the first time!

  • [computer turns on, fans whir to life]

  • [startup beep] Heh, nyah that’s not a great sign.

  • Weve got a red LED lit up on the left channel peak meter, nothing showing on the right,

  • and then there’s the Windows startup sound.

  • [distorted XP startup sound plays]

  • Not only did that sound pretty awful, but it seems the bottom red LED on the right channel

  • over there doesn’t light up at all.

  • [system dinging sounds]

  • I did open up the box to see if anything obvious was broken,

  • disconnected, or otherwise out of place.

  • But nah, no luck there.

  • The LED stubbornly refuses to work.

  • Oh well, here’s what the insides look like, so there’s that.

  • There’s a SONiX Technology SN8P1704 microcontroller in here, for those of you who care.

  • And would you look at that, the bracket would definitely fit the ports on this PCB

  • if it wasn’t crammed into this little box,

  • so it makes me wonder what else Thermaltake used these parts for.

  • Anyway, back to testing things out.

  • And at least the VU meters seem to work!

  • Sort of.

  • Let’s go ahead and try playing some music and see how that goes.

  • [“The Years We Hadby Magnus Ringblom plays]

  • [music volume changes with varying distortion]

  • Heh, you know.

  • All the warning signs and red flags indicated this thing would be terrible.

  • And it is!

  • The CircleFire is very clearly a gimmick, a kind of case mod toy not to be taken seriously.

  • So why am I still disappointed?

  • Misguided optimism strikes again.

  • Right, so, the Thermaltake CircleFire.

  • It technically works.

  • The speaker outputs sound, the VU meters bounce to the music, the LED backlighting does its

  • thing, and the peak meters react to sound.

  • There’s also a volume button for switching between three slightly varying levels of amplification,

  • and a color button for cycling through seven preset colors, with an eighth option putting

  • all on them on an endless rotation.

  • The problem is that everything sucks.

  • Let’s start with those peak and VU meters,

  • which I hesitate to call them that now that I’ve used them.

  • For one thing, the peak meters are upside-down,

  • going from red on the bottom to green on the top.

  • That makes absolutely no sense! [chuckles]

  • And the VU meters, well, they don’t react

  • or move like any VU meters I’ve ever seen.

  • These kind of meters are supposed to have a comparatively slow response and ignore the

  • signal peaking, providing a sort of average volume unit level

  • to indicate overall how loud the audio is.

  • But uh, yeah just look at these things.

  • There ain’t nothing indicating average levels of volume here, it’s just bouncing all over

  • the place at normal volume, it’s useless at slightly lower volume,

  • and pure chaos at high volume.

  • Then there’s audio playback itself.

  • Getting anything to play through this speaker

  • and not sound like hot garbage is a serious challenge.

  • In order to achieve output that isn’t distorted into oblivion or completely blowing out the

  • meters, there’s a tiny window of acceptable volume where you can just barely get it sounding

  • decently and making things react in a way that makes a little sense.

  • And that’s a relatively low volume indeed, around 18 to 25 percent, with anything much

  • higher or lower making the CircleFire rather useless.

  • Even then though, you wouldn’t want to use this speaker for any kind of half-serious purpose.

  • It’s a two watt plastic circle that does the absolute bare minimum in terms of sound

  • reproduction, though I guess they were pretty restricted in terms of what they could even

  • use in a space this small.

  • There’s also the fact that there’s no passthrough on the CircleFire, which is a

  • problem if you want to use the meters but don’t want to use the built-in speaker.

  • Unlike other drive bay audio devices like the NewQ gold, which feature a breakout cable

  • with inputs and outputs around back, the CircleFire only works using a single 3.5mm audio cable.

  • So youre stuck using that awful speaker no matter what unless you provide your own

  • splitter around back to send audio to both external speakers and the CircleFire.

  • I suppose it does its job of providing sound decently enough in certain situations though,

  • like if youve brought your computer over to a friend’s place and forgot to bring

  • speakers or headphones, or just can’t be bothered to hook either of those up.

  • But still, it’s a tinny, mono speaker that sounds like trash, so I hope youre playing

  • something that’s not relying on positional audio of any kind.

  • Left, right, center, it’s all the same and it all sounds dreadful.

  • [Unreal Tournament 2004 plays]

  • -"You have won the match!"

  • So there you have it.

  • Barring that one red LED not lighting up for some reason, the Thermaltake CircleFire achieves

  • its goal of being a speaker with some colorful meters and Guy Fieri flames that you can stick

  • in your computer case to quote, stand out from the crowd at LAN parties.

  • But as far as being a “professional multimedia device,” haha, don’t be ridiculous.

  • Despite knowing better, I still hoped that at least those analog VU meters would do something

  • halfway useful in terms of providing visual representation of volume levels, but of course not.

  • The meters simply dance around haphazardly and remain only somewhat in sync with what’s

  • passing through the speaker, resulting in an experience that’s amusingly novel at

  • first glance but doesn’t hold up to any kind of scrutiny

  • once you look at it for even a few seconds.

  • And seeing how hard it was to find one of these to begin with this will likely not be

  • useful information to anyone at all.

  • But hey, that’s just how it goes on LGR.

  • Outdated computer accessories and retro technology that no one asked to see, but here it is anyway.

  • ["Pineapple" by Yomoti plays]

  • And if you liked what you saw here then do check out my previous videos on things you

  • can stick in a computer case, or perhaps subscribe to keep track of similar stuff I do in the

  • future, with new videos arriving every week.

  • And as always, thank you for watching LGR!

Greetings and today on LGR

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B1 中級

曜越CircleFire:2000年中期的PC VU表 (Thermaltake CircleFire: Mid-2000s PC VU Meters)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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