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Steiger Dynamics makes home theater PCs a luxury with the Maven

steiger dynamics brings computing living room style sdmaven 2
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The living room PC is sounds like a great idea; all of your games, movies, and photos on a giant screen. Execution is another matter, however, and the boutique computer makers who’ve tried to enter this market have often had little luck. Now, a new manufacturer has emerged with a commitment to crack this tough problem: Steiger Dynamics

Founded two years ago, the company focuses on expensive, premium, super-powered home theater PCs. Knowing that no off-the-shelf enclosure could adequately encase a cutting-edge home theater PC, Steiger Dynamics builds all of its cases from scratch from thick aluminum panels.

Though costly – the case for these high-end PCs is available to system builders, for $800 – this approach gives Steiger Dynamics the opportunity to craft a product tailored to the needs of the living room. The case must have room for powerful hardware, yet the cooling system can emit no more noise than a whisper. To achieve this, the company’s enclosures are designed with space for large, slow-spinning fans and liquid cooling radiators. 

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The flagship of the company is the Leet, a massive machine that weighs up to 55 pounds and can be equipped with liquid cooling for both the processor and video cards, a front-mounted LCD screen, an overclocked Intel Core i7 processor, two Nvidia Titan video cards, and a TV tuner card. Pricing starts at $1,799 but can soar well above $6,000 with all the options checked.

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Steiger Dynamics’ big announcement at this year’s show, however, is the Maven, a smaller HTPC built for enthusiasts with shallow wallets. Starting at $999, this smaller model can be customized with either AMD or Intel processors and ships in a lighter, shorter case.

Some of the Leet’s options, like the LED display, are not available, but the Maven can still be an outlandishly quick powerhouse. The best pre-configured model, the Maven Reference, has a Core i7-4780K six-core processor and GTX 760 graphics card. Further customization can add a second graphics card and up to 12TB of storage, enough to store 1,000 Blu-Ray movies.

The Maven is will be available for purchase in late January.

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
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