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I hate my computer's case. For a variety of reasons.
The front bezel is cheap, flimsy plastic, the USB plugs were located in
such a way that they could be easily broken if the computer were on the
floor. It's a pain to slide the side of the case off for system upgrades
or maintenance. The drive bays are welded in, and rather inconvenient
when installing/removing drives, especially the 3.5 inch HD bays, of
which one side is obscured by the motherboard tray. The motherboard tray
is welded in. The card screws are covered by a cumbersome "security
device" The power and resent buttons are located such that gripping the
case will generally result in the system going to sleep or being reset.
There's a handle on the top of the case that is completely unnecessary,
and utterly scary if you do lift it by this handle. The card slots are
ever so slightly misaligned such that installing an AGP video card is a
major pain in the ass. They provide a cut-out for a firewire plug, but
failed to provide the actual plug. The headers for the USB are single
pins (yeah, try to get that right ... I dare ya.) Oh, yeah and did I
mention the motherboard tray is welded in place? Ventilation is totally
inadequate for a modern machine...
I suspect my heat problems started when I upgraded the video adapter.
The video adapter produces copious amounts of heat when under load. It
has a very nice heatsink fan, which is good. It carries the heat from
the card very efficiently. Now, this is not a double-wide card, so it
vents the heat into the case. No problem, I have 3 friggen fans in this
case. One in the side (80mm), two in the back (80mm) The side fan is
intake, the back fans are exhaust, as well as the power supply fan
(120mm) Now, you'd think with that many fans you'd get adequate cooling.
No. Just ... no. You see, there's some nice holes in the top of the case
to provide ventilation beyond just the fans. (Wait, what? the top?) yes,
the top, which provides great airflow to the empty drive bays, and the
empty space at the top of the case, but fails to provide flow to
critical things like, oh, say, the motherboard. I suspect the fan in the
side is purely for aesthetics, and (here's the kicker!) every other case
I've seen has copious amounts of vent holes in the bottom front of the
case, along with a convenient mount for a fan! This case? No! There is
no ventilation for cool air to come in from the bottom of the case and
be pulled across the main board.
I fixed the ventilation problem last night. I pulled out the drive bay
covers and jammed a desk fan against the new orifice. Guess what? My
I'm still looking forward to my new PC, it should be nice and quick, but
this is a marked improvement over what I had before.
--
~Mike
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Hehe, i can feel with you:
I have an older Chieftec Dragon DG-01 midi tower, where the HD cage is
removable, but only if your AGP-Card is not too long. It slides bakwards 2-3
inches before it disengages.
Cooling is no problem though. I have 2 front fans, two back fans and one side
fan running.
My other case is a Chieftech Mesh CH-01. The HDs are very easily accessable and
the side doors are easily removed or mounted. And it runs very cool with 5 case
fans in total.
My next case will probably be a Sharkoon Rebel or Seraphim.
Have fun with your new system
Aydan
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Aydan wrote:
> Hehe, i can feel with you:
A good case these days is hard to find.
(NO! DAMN! Now I have that SONG in my head...! >_< )
My first PC case had one of those stupid doors on the front that's
supposed to open when the CD tray ejects. Except it doesn't retract
properly, the button on the outside doesn't press the button on the
drive properly, etc. Lame thing. It was ASUS as well...
I think a case is one of those things you have to actually pick up and
look at in the shop. From a website you can't tell what the hell you're
getting. *sigh*
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> I think a case is one of those things you have to actually pick up and
> look at in the shop. From a website you can't tell what the hell you're
> getting. *sigh*
The best case I had was at university, it was a sheet of stainless steel
with some holes I drilled in it for various mounting points and ventilation.
Sat under my desk at the back and ran very cool, was very cheap, and never
had any access issues :-)
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scott wrote:
>> I think a case is one of those things you have to actually pick up and
>> look at in the shop. From a website you can't tell what the hell
>> you're getting. *sigh*
>
> The best case I had was at university, it was a sheet of stainless steel
> with some holes I drilled in it for various mounting points and
> ventilation. Sat under my desk at the back and ran very cool, was very
> cheap, and never had any access issues :-)
...except issues with the local forna having access to it? o_O
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> ...except issues with the local forna having access to it? o_O
In most cases the local fauna had enough brain-power to not crawl underneath
the desk and stick a finger into a fan :-)
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>> ...except issues with the local forna having access to it? o_O
>
> In most cases the local fauna had enough brain-power to not crawl
> underneath the desk and stick a finger into a fan :-)
http://www.insectimage.com/Gallery%2017/snakecomp2.html
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Invisible wrote:
> http://www.insectimage.com/Gallery%2017/snakecomp2.html
Good one :)
"Uh, yeah ... my computer made some really odd hissing sound when I
turned it on .."
--
~Mike
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Invisible wrote:
> I think a case is one of those things you have to actually pick up and
> look at in the shop. From a website you can't tell what the hell you're
> getting. *sigh*
Yes. I always get funny looks from the people at the local electronics
warehouse stores when I go to buy a prebuilt system and I ask them to open
several up so I can look inside.
Unfortunately, in same local stores, it's too loud to easily hear how loud
the individual machine is, but I seem to have done pretty well there by
buying machines targetted for home stereo use.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Insanity is a small city on the western
border of the State of Mind.
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Darren New <dne### [at] sanrrcom> wrote:
> Yes. I always get funny looks from the people at the local electronics
> warehouse stores when I go to buy a prebuilt system and I ask them to open
> several up so I can look inside.
I only ever had one prebuilt system and that was in '94.
After that I always bought individual parts or had the system built to spec, so
I know what exactly is in there.
Also it's sorta fun to built your own PC.
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