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๐ผ Elevate your NAS game with style, silence, and storage power!
The JONSBO N2 White NAS ITX Case is a compact, aluminum mini-ITX chassis designed for high-capacity storage with 5 hot-swappable 3.5โ HDD bays plus a 2.5โ SSD bay. It features a built-in 12cm fan optimized for quiet, efficient cooling and supports CPU coolers up to 65mm. Ideal for home office, network, and enterprise storage, it offers tool-less installation and compatibility with low-profile PCI cards, combining sleek aesthetics with practical expandability.







| ASIN | B0BQJ6HHXJ |
| Antenna Location | Network Storage, Home Office, Enterprise Storage |
| Best Sellers Rank | 48,960 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 381 in Computer Cases |
| Brand | Jonsbo |
| Brand Name | Jonsbo |
| Case Type | Integrated |
| Case type | Integrated |
| Colour | White |
| Compatible Devices | CPU |
| Cooling Method | Air |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 35 Reviews |
| Enclosure Material | Aluminium |
| Fan Size | 12 Centimetres |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 3.5 Inches |
| Internal Bays Quantity | 6 |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 22.3D x 22.3W x 22.4H centimetres |
| Manufacturer | Dongguan Sibositong Industrial Co., LTD |
| Material | Aluminium |
| Model Name | N2 WHITE |
| Model Number | N2 |
| Motherboard compatibility | Mini ITX |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Tool-less Installation, Advanced Cooling System |
| Power Supply Mounting Type | Bottom Mount |
| Recommended uses for product | Network Storage, Home Office, Enterprise Storage |
| Supported Motherboard | Mini ITX |
| Total USB 3.0 Ports | 1 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
G**N
Great Product
Probably not necessary to give this NAS box another 5 star review, but I will. Great product. Good design. Good quality. I was migrating my NAS from a previous enclosure that kept overheating my drives with 3 fans. With the open top design, its nice to mount your ITX board, and route your cables however you like. Routing 5 SATA cables may require some thinking. Especially because most ITX motherboards donโt have 5 SATA ports. As luck would have it, I was already using a PCI-SATA card, and all my previous 90deg SATA cables worked perfectly for minimizing cable traffic, but more importantly avoiding interference zones with the rear fan and restricting airflow. All went together nicely. Couple lessons learned. Immediately replace the mesh intake and exhaust mesh plates with 120mm grills. That will increase airflow and reduce noise considerably. And, connect your fan to your motherboard so you can control it, and not have to run it at full speed. The fan cable is plenty long enough to reach your motherboard. There are several posts on replacing the fan with an exterior Noctua, even a 3D printed mod to minimize how far it sticks out. These are all good posts, but I thought I would first try the stock fan. As it turns out, running the fan at about 30% rpm yields ample cooling and is quieter than my CPU fan. No need to be quieter than your CPU fan. All-in-all. A Great Product!
M**N
Really nice looking compact case with some great ideas and a few flaws
Nicely thought out and good looking case. I build a brand new 12+ bay rackmount NAS, and transplanted the old NAS parts to this case to use elsewhere. The rubber screw/handle system is unusual but is a cheap way to make the drives swappable without increasing the size or cost of the unit. It's "convertible" into a 5+2; they used the same upper bar on both sides so there are two screw holes present on opposite side of the designated SSD mount too. With some squeezing I got a second SSD in there ok. The slim fan is sandwiched between two very restrictive grills. Not quite sure how to address this yet. Also, it would have been a lot better if there was some kind of temperature control for the fan. I'm going to see if my motherboard temperature readout is effective enough to manage the drive temperatures, and connect the fan to the motherboard instead of the built in fan header. Route all your cables first before you screw anything down. I had to remove the motherboard to re-cable and somehow stripped a standoff screw hole in the process.
M**B
Small, great
Tight squeeze but great size. Quiet
B**N
Pretty! Quiet! Awkward to build in!
I like this case but it was a bit of a pain to route the power supply cabling, and there's very little space for SATA cables between the backplane and the rear fan. I had to remove the inner fan screen to make things fit. This part is only really an issue if you use a fanless motherboard, but you also absolutely must put a fan in the upper motherboard chamber, otherwise the CPU will have no airflow.
C**.
Nice case, good cable routing, noisy fan
Overall I like this case except for the noisy, slightly non-standard fan. Pros: - For a small case it has very good support for neat cable routing. - Most of the case is assembled with small screws so you can easily partially disassemble it to help route cables in best positions. - The power supply can be mounted with the fan facing either the louvers on the case side or inward toward the case interior. This is handy at least in my case where the power supply fan was the noisiest fan (after replacing the case fan) and orienting so it faced the interior of the case made it much quieter. Cons: - The case fan is very noisy for a case that is obviously designed to be attractive and used in an occupied room or office. And while it is a 120mm fan, it is only 15mm thick instead of the normal 25mm of standard PC case fans. This limits the options for quieter replacements. I did replace it with a Noctua fan the same size but it runs at a higher speed than their really quiet case fans and is therefor somewhat noisier. It would have been nice if they had made the case a minor 10mm deeper so it fit a standard fan. As it is, there is not enough clearance with the cables to allow a 25mm fan to fit. - A minor annoyance is that the front panel board has both USB-A and USB-C 3.0 connectors, but it seems that most low power motherboards that would likely be used in a NAS system do not have a compatible USB-C motherboard connector (some don't even have a USB-A 3.0 connector) and the heavy cables from these are difficult to route, especially hiding an unused one. Fortunately, the connectors for these are easily removed from the front panel board with two small screws each if they are not needed. As I said, a pretty nice case overall. The hot plug drives seem to fit and seat quite nicely.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago