Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'chassis'.
-
I'm building a new PC soon and I was just wondering what you guys think is the better case of these two. They both seem like amazing cases, and although I'm leaning more towards the Luxe, I'd like to hear other people's opinions on this. Components for my upcoming build if you need to know: Intel Core i5 6600K Asus Z170-P D3 CM Hyper 212 EVO Gigabyte GTX 750 Ti Black Edition WD Black 1TB HDD 7200RPM Samsung 850 EVO 120GB G.Skill Sniper 8GB 1600MHz Corsair CX430M
-
Im looking for good mid-tower cases that can fit an atx motherboard and a 120mm or 240mm radiator fan.
- 5 replies
-
- cases
- entry level
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
I'm surprised that something like this doesn't exist so I guess it's about time one is written up. There many factors to consider when buying a chassis or "case" for your PCs components. Let's list them out. Price Compatible motherboard form factors Size of the case Storage potential with or without 5.25 inch drive bay compatibility Color/Aesthetics (subjective) Airflow Noise suppression I/O Cable management Features Watercooling compatibility and/or support for large air coolers There's a subjective amount more but these are the ones I see people asking about the most so I'll explain them in detail. Price This should be pretty self-explanatory. You can only buy what you have money available for. Here's a list of some cases that fit various price brackets. These prices are listed in USD.
-
Which case fan has the 2 pin led connectors? because... my case has a led switch so why should i NOT use it? But the coolermaster ones are not avaliable at Hong Kong. but i can buy any fans on amazon. can you send me a link on amazon? and i cant afford bitfenix ones... any help will be greately appreciated! thanks!
-
Hey Linus Techites, i just got a new InWin 707 gaming black edition chassis (FULL) for the new rig im putting together and just wanted some help/suggestions. My mian concern is air flow, ill have 120mm cpu radiatior at the top, the stock fan(s) that comes with the case, and the fans on my graphics card that are forced downward facing the power supply, so the big question is, what directions should each of my fans be pointing to get the maximum air flow?
-
Hi guys, I am looking to buy a full tower PC case, I have been looking at the NZXT 820, Corsair 780T and Phanteks Enthoo Primo. I chose these cases because of of the capability to mount a 280mm radiator on top (for my NZXT Kraken X61) My budget is between $260, which the NZXT and Corsair fit, but the Phanteks is $80 more, is the price justifiable for this case? is it that much better than the rest? Also will the NZXT side fan help my Dual GTX 980's cool? is it a big difference compared to Corsair 780T side window? I want the case that can COOL the best and the one with the most SILENCE, i know these cases are not really the silent types, but I want the one thats the most silent as well, if the noise between cases is the same, sacrificing sound for better cooling is better as long as the sacrifice is moderate. If you guys have any other cases that are around the $260 budget maybe $20 more or (but thats the max) then please recommend them, also to note I live in AUSTRALIA and the prices are really expensive Thank You
- 6 replies
-
- case
- full tower
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
So this started happening last week and basically what happens is that when i have been playing games for a while and if i touch the side of my pc case, it gives me this weird shock. Its not like a *snap* shock its more continuous. All groundings in my psu and outlet are fine and i dusted the case. Does anyone know what might be causing this? Also i can hear little crunches from the case sometimes if thats any help.
-
Here is my current PC build: - CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T - MAIN: ASUS M4A88TD-V EVO USB3 (ATX) - RAM: GSkill NT DDR3 4x2GB 1333MHz - GPU: Gigabyte R9 280X Windforce GV-R928XOC-3GD (L=285mm, W=126mm, H=38mm) - Storage: 2 HDD Sata 7200rpm - PSU: FSP BlueStorm 500W - Cooler Option: CM Seido 120V (1fan), and few 80mm fan case - Current case: CM 690 Advance Plus Im planing for big upgrade on cpu, main and case, and im aiming to build as small as possible for optimize my workspace (which now is really waste of space cuz the midsize case CM690Plus) I already have a small research on the internet and found Jonsbo UMX1 Window Version http://jonsbo.com/en/products_27_3.html I really love it but my graphic card was too long to fit in it (or maybe in manual said that its only support vga card not longer than 270m) but it have 345 x 160 x 300 mm, which if i try to remove the front fan, it might be fit, dont know, and cant test that. I also have found the Bitfenix Colossus M which look really nice, but again the vga card My budget is around 400-550$ (do not include money to downsize the storage solution like SSD)and most piority of my plan is build as small as possible, so i think i need a m-atx main, or even mitx, which also have to change to other cpu. But i dont know, 550$ budget is really not that big to build case as small as possible and at least strong as my current phenom rig. So should i try to build now or wait for lower price and rise my budget? I really need some advices from bros over here, so much thanks!~
-
I followed the one on the website which is a Negative Airflow. (I think) 1 x 120mm INTAKE Fan on the Front. (Always running on Full RPM) 1 x 120mm OUTTAKE Fan on the Bottom. (Determined by my custom profile on Fan Xpert 2) 1 x 120mm OUTTAKE Fan on the Back. (Determined by my custom profile on Fan Xpert 2) 2 x 120mm OUTTAKE Fan on Top. (Determined by my custom profile on Fan Xpert 2) 2 x 120mm OUTTAKE Fan on the Side Panel. (Connected directly on the PSU, I still need a 3-pin Y-Splitter) Temps seems decent on idle and on a hot day even with the AC turned off and only using a stock cpu cooler. I am planning to get a Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO just to make it a little cooler even though I don't even overclock it. I also like to change my Airflow to Positive, since that's the orientation that Jayztwocents recommended. So, what are your thoughts on this, guys?
- 3 replies
-
- aerocool
- strikexone
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
I am planning to build a gaming desktop in micro ATX form factor, but have been unable to come to a decision. Here is my build plan thus far: http://nz.pcpartpicker.com/p/gv43YJ When reviewing my build, I realised that the SPEC-03 isn't an ideal choice, as it's too large for me, and I don't require massive amounts of space for expansion cards and storage. A few choices I've considered have been the Aerocool X-Predator Cube, the BitFenix prodigy M, and the Bit Fenix Colossus M. I love the aesthetics of the prodigy, but bother BF cases have USB and power on the side, which is annoying because I like to keep the PC On the floor and my desk nice and spacey. On the other hand, while the Aerocool is hardly a badlooking case, particularly the red-black model, Aerocool seems like a bit of an obscure brand. I'm fairly new to the PC building world, so it could be just me. I preferably don't want to spend more than $180 ish NZD dollars, so all fit in my price range. What are your guys thoughts / suggestions?
-
Hey everyone! My GTX 690 has gone to sh*t lately, so i'm going to upgrade my GPU. But in the process, i might aswell update some of my other parts, and those include: -a new Chassis -New PSU for R9 390 Nitro. -Cooling for OC. Now, for the GPU, i'm looking at the R9 390 Nitro, since the AMD market is a little cheaper than the Nvidia market here in Denmark. As for the new chassis, i've been looking at the Corsair Graphite 760T, since it looks REALLY awesome, and it provides lots of workspace for later on. As for the PSU, i have no idea whether i need to upgrade, since i bought the PC through a company, that custom-builds PCs back in 2012. For the cooling, i have no clue as to what is neccessary, but i've heard that AMD GPUs typically run a lot hotter than Nvidia, and tend to need better cooling all around. I would also like to OC if possible. My current speccs look like this: https://i.imgur.com/wyrWsF9.png And last, but not least, what i expect from the build: I'd like to run GTA V at High/Ultra settings, at around the 60 FPS mark. I'm also wating for Fallout 4 to release, but if it runs GTA at nice speeds, it should be able to do Fallout 4 just fine. My budget is around 700-900€, i'm a little flexible, but would like to stay around the 600-700€ mark. Thank you for reading!
-
Original Article from goldfries.com : http://www.goldfries.com/hardware-reviews/cooler-master-mastercase-5-pro-5-modular-desktop-casing-review/ ----------------------------------- The MasterCase 5 and MasterCase Pro 5, the world’s first mid-sized modular towers with exterior expandability were first announced during Computex 2015 and the design drew quite some excitement. If you're a subscriber to my Youtube Channel, you probably have seen my coverage of the MasterCase 5 booth at Computex 2015. Here's the video if you haven't watch it. Cooler Master treated us attendees with a special session, to let us understand better the concept behind MasterCase 5. To put it simple, Cooler Master is going back to its roots and with that comes the tagline "Make It Yours". More details at the http://www.coolermaster.com/computex/mastercase/ So what's the MasterCase 5 like? Here's a walk-through, courtesy of Cooler Master. To sum it up, the Pro 5 variant gives you additional drive bays, fan, and a radiator bracket at the top. With the introduction done, let's have a look at the product. Starting from the top, the MasterCase 5 comes with a distinct angled front panel. The MasterCase 5's top comes with 2 handles and between the handle likes a removable panel that you are able to mount 120mm and 140mm fans. If someday you wish to upgrade to a closed-loop water cooling system then there's the Top Cover kit that comes with a mesh panel and a radiator bracket. Feel free to use one without the other, they're not dependent on one another. For those opting for The MasterCase Pro 5, the Top-cover kit is part of the package. The front cover is removable and you're able to add additional fans, up to a total of 3 fans as an additional fan bracket is provided in the accessory kit, that fan bracket is to be used on the 5.25" drive bays at the top. From the rear the Master Case 5 is no different from other casings, one thing to note is that it does not come with any cut-out for water cooling tubes. The fan mount with adjustable positioning supports both 120mm and 140mm fan. At the bottom is the PSU mount that comes with a mounting bracket. I encountered a slight hiccup when I mounted the PSU on the bracket and attempted to secure it to the case. After meddling with the installation for a few minutes, I finally figured out the problem was that the padding to support the PSU was very thick, thus leading to the imbalance that makes it near impossible to secure the screw. I figured out a workaround and that is to place the PSU into the casing WITHOUT mounting it on the plate. After that I secured the plate to chassis and finally, secure the PSU to the plate. As you can see, that quite defeats the purpose of the mounting plate. One thing I hope Cooler Master improves on is the nature of the mounting plate - the screws are so short it could barely secure the plate properly. Should the ridges of the screw be damaged, there's no way for the plate to be secure. At the bottom the MasterCase 5 comes with 4 reasonably long rubber feet for secure footing. Now for the interior - the MasterCase 5 is spacious, the interior is split into 2 areas and that's one for the key components while the lower section is for the PSU, cable management and additional drive bays. Rubber grommets are found on every cutout. Here's the upper corner, it comes with a 140mm fan pre-installed and the cut-out is huge. There's also sufficient room between the board and the top of the casing and that helps a lot when it comes to cable management. Towards the front of the interior are the drive cages, they are removable. Drive bays are also available at panel just above the PSU. At the back there's ample space for hiding cables. The cables from the front panel are neatly tied to the casing structure as seen in this photo. Here's what the interior looks like with a full-sized ATX board and the PSU in place. A view from the back for those interested, notice how the large cutout underneath the motherboard works great for practically any CPU socket location. We're coming to the end of the article and I think some of you might be concerned by the lack of window for the side-panel - Don't worry, the windowed side panel is available as an accessory. For those opting for The MasterCase Pro 5, the windowed side-panel is part of the package. What this means is that you modify the side panel and other components as much as you want - tired of the theme? Get a new side-panel and make it something else. The frame of the MasterCase 5 is such that it has minimal holes around, I've no avenue to place LED strips on the top and front panel area unless I punch some holes. User Experience The USER EXPERIENCE segment is often not part of my casing reviews but I feel like I can't end this casing review without it. You see, Cooler Master's theme for the Master Case 5 is "Make It Yours" and they promoted MODULAR SYSTEM and it would be a shame if I didn't experience that myself, after all I grew up with Cooler Master and have been a Cooler Master user for almost 20 years now and seeing how they mentioned "Going back to their roots" - well, I'd like to experience what I experienced back then. I still have my Centurion 2 casing, back then I didn't have much skills nor resource to modify it but I still spent a fair bit to hire a friend to cut that casing to it could have a fan on top and a side panel with 2x 120mm fans. Moving forward to 2015 - I decided to MAKE IT MINE with the Master Case components Cooler Master sent to me and here's the final outcome. It was a rewarding experience, I'm not an expert case modder myself but I am very happy with the results. The modular system of MasterCase 5 made it a lot easier for me to get the paint job done. The content is spacious that I've enough room to place lights and have custom made the GPU cover and also a base-plate for the system. Notice that the side panel is huge but bottom area of the side panel window is covered so you need not show the ugly side of the system. System Specs Processor : AMD FX-9590 Motherboard : ASRock Fatal1ty 990FX Killer RAM : AVEXIR Core Series DDR3 2x4GB RED Graphic Card : PowerColor R9 390 8GB PSU : Cooler Master V750 Cooler : Cooler Master Nepton 240M running 2x JetFlo 120mm White LED fan. SSD : Intel SSD 330 180GB Extender Cables : UnequalTech The Verdict Cooler Master MasterCase 5 retails at RM 479 (approx 120 USD) while the MasterCase Pro 5 at RM 599 (approx 150 USD). Both casings are great but I think the MasterCase Pro 5 would be a more attractive option if you intend to perform some case mod on it. Regardless which model you choose, they're both great for modding. I made the MasterCase Pro 5 mine, you should consider making one yours too! Short of funds? You could always settle for the MasterCase 5 first and upgrade with the available accessories much later. Side Window Kit : $24.99 Top Cover Kit : $16.99 3.5” HDD Bracket 3-Bay : $14.99 3.5” HDD Bracket 2-Bay : $12.99 2.5” SSD Bracket : $4.99 *Above price is in USD.
- 1 reply
-
- cooler master
- mastercase 5
- (and 8 more)
-
A new video is up at nzxt.com, teasing what looks like a brand new case to be revealed on April 28th. It definitely looks more agressive than the minimal styling of the S340 and H440, could this be a new case in the Phantom line? UPDATE 4/28: NZXT announce the Noctis 450. UPDATE: More videos and basic specs. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfG9ZSnJdR4 Featues: - Adjustable LED system with lighting switch - Integrated power supply shroud with SSD mounts - Fully filtered front air intake and PSU exhaust - Four included FN V2 case fans: 3x 120mm (Front) and 1x 140mm (Rear) - Liquid cooling support: 240mm, 280mm, 360mm Radiators - Motherboard support for ATX, mATX, and ITX - GPU support of up to 406mm to fit all current gen Nvidia or AMD GPUs - Integrated 8-port PWM fan hub - Effortless cable management capabilities - Comes in black with red LED, and white and black with blue LED. Specs: Drive Bays: External 5.25": 0, Internal 3.5"/2.5": 6+2 Cooling System Front: 2x 140/3x120mm (3 x 120mm FN V2 Fans Included) Top: 2x 140/3x120mm Rear: 1x 140/120mm (1 x 140mm FN V2 Fan Included) Filters: Front (Included), Bottom Rear(Included) Radiator Support: Front 2 x 140 or 3 x 120mm, Top 2 x 140 or 3 x 120mm, Rear 1 x 140/120mm GPU Clearance With HDD Cage: 294mm GPU Clearance Without HDD Cage: 406.2mm CPU Cooler: 180mm Cable Management: Lowest Point - 17.7mm; Highest Point 32.5mm Dimensions: 220mm x 567mm x 544mm (WxHxD) Material: SECC Steel, ABS Plastic Motherboard Support: Mini-ITX, MicroATX, ATX Expansion Slots: 7 External Electronics: 1 x Audio/Mic I/O Panel LED On/Off Product Weight: 9.75 kg USB 3.0 Ports: 2 USB 2.0 Ports: 2 Warranty: 2 Years Personal Thoughts: I prefer minimalistic design. (My favorite case is the FT05) To me, the H440 is beautiful, and this case is a far cry from minimal. Having said that, I must admit that out of all the cases from the Phantom line, this is the prettiest. I love the overlapping design used on the roof and front pannel. I'd also like to see what kind of airflow this gets compared to the H440. Sorry this isn't much of an overview, but I'm no ninja.
-
Hello. I have a question to ask: I currently have 2 120mm Coolermaster Jetflo on my case(acting both as intakes) My case supoorts 4 fans. 2 intakes in the side and 2 outtakes on the front and back (one each). My B85-Plus motherboard only supports 2 fans. How do I power the other 2 outake fans? Thank you
- 9 replies
-
- motherboard
- fan
-
(and 6 more)
Tagged with:
-
I just thought I'd share this piece of epicness since I know not everyone traverses Reddit.
-
im currently building my first pc with these specs :http://pcpartpicker.com/p/JyjjhM. I am unsure as to what case I should get because of the size of the gigabyte gtx970 g1 gaming edition. any ideas would be appreciated.(I am not looking for an extremely expensive/fancy one, just one that will get the job done. The cheaper the better, within reason of course.) thank you for your help
-
Beware of Parvum Systems! If anyone wants to buy a case, get a case from known manufacturers like Corsair, CoolerMaster, ThermalTake, NZXT, etc.. or create your own case and do It by yourself. My story started when I decided to have custom made Parvum S2.0 case with a Republic of Gamers theme, had my own plan and wanted something different and unique. I contacted Justin from Parvum and been told to pay £241.65 ($364) so they can start with the project. Service Level Agreement: Justin said this will take 3 weeks to be done (from starting the design concepts until shipping out the case), the case was sent to me after 2 months!! Reason? They said I have requested extra stuff .. and guess what the extra stuff are? A black motherboard tray and an ROG logo instead of the 80mm fans!! 6 extra weeks for a black motherboard tray that they already have and an ROG logo .. Email from Justin: http://cdn.top4top.net/i_e44f4976641.png Quality of the Case: So finally, I got the case .. and god .. continue reading please: 1) Quality Never seen a low quality engraving in a case, look how the ROG logo engraved in the 80mm fans place + the borders of the 120mm fans holes has white stuff that I couldn’t remove with alcohol .. 2) SSD Locations and a wobbly case I requested a custom SSD location, I told Justin that I have a custom ROG stickers on my SSDs and wanted them to be visible without showing the cables .. he suggested the following: email from Justin: http://cdn.top4top.net/i_e44f4976642.png Then I replied with: (please notice how I keep reminding him that I’ll be using a sound card AND in need of a black motherboard tray): Email to Justin: http://cdn.top4top.net/i_61ade6df553.png And this is what I got, a wobbly case (cables clutter under the case) and SSDs that are not visible: A red motherboard tray and he simply replied with a “sorry” email (thankfully I had a black motherboard try from a previous Parvum S2.0 case that I bought off the internet and did not use) and the SSD location is really bad .. a sound card can block the SSD from viewing .. and installing the GPU will totally cover the SSDs. 3) PCIE bracket PCIE bracket .. for the love of god .. got a white one instead of black (painted it black myself) + please look at how the sound card is aligned with the PCIE bracket. I broke my motherboard PCIE lane while trying to align the GPU with the PCIE bracket .. now I have to buy a new motherboard: 4) No USB 3.0 screw holes One of the worse quality control I’ve ever seen .. they forgot to drill the USB 3.0 screw holes .. without them I can’t install the USB 3.0 module on the case: What happened next? Nothing .. Justin offered to change the case bottom panel to fix the SSDs location .. which will not work .. he also said he shipped the front panel with the USB 3.0 screw holes which should take 4 – 6 days (it’s been a month now and I still didn’t get anything) .. They don't respond to your emails in time, the don't read your emails thoroughly and they don't have quality! Please guys .. make sure to go to well-known companies for your cases, don’t waste your money on Parvum cases. I wasted a lot of money, broke my motherboard, my PC parts are still around for more than 3 months and still don’t have a damn PC!
-
So I've begun thinking about what I'd want to put my future hardware in when I move out of the house and am on my own, and it came to mind I might want to have a NAS-type device to do backups since standalone drives have just gotten horribly slow for such a thing. I started looking at dual-system cases, but I was consistently disappointed by the options I found. Most support up to an EATX in one side and only an ITX in the other. While I would have been fine with the EATX side, only having ITX on the other means I'd have to get one Hell of a RAID card to attach my theoretical drive array to instead of 2 cheaper cards, and that very much limits my networking options if I start a family and want there to be more access to it. You see, ITX boards never come with double NIC options, much less double 10GB, which would be preferable so my main rig could attach directly and I could have a connection going to the house network for everyone else to use so nothing would get slowed down during a backup. I've also been trying to find a chassis that I could do water cooling on, preferably one which supports 140 by x radiators. After all, cooling an E5 Xeon and a future flagship GPU in addition to the secondary CPU won't be such an easy task... And to top it off, I'm finding it difficult to find cases that have just a couple 5.25" bays for the reservoir and fan controller(s) and use the rest of the vertical real estate for fans for the drives. I'd also prefer to have a magnetic fan filter... Yes, I want it all I guess, but I need advice on what would be the best compromise... I'd like the front bay configuration, storage bay options, and wheels of this I'd like the motherboard, cable routing, front fan config, power button config, and dust filter option of this. And I'd actually like everything to just be 140mm fans so I can hang dual 560mm rads off the back... I'd also prefer the case not weigh 20KG with nothing inside it yet, but maybe I'm asking too much all things considered... Does anyone know of the miracle case I yearn for?
-
Well, I'm almost done with my build, with this Case "tweaks" (finalization LOL ) I might get the best value out of my system. My Mobo would be a mATX mobo. So any Mid or a mATX would suit me. I just want the best bang for the buck. My budget would be around $60-$70(would work hard to hit the $80) (I'm not from the U.S, and case choices here are limited to almost 2013 cases, some 2014 cases are way too pricy). Not Available Case Manufacturers would be: Phanteks Zalman Lian-Li Rosewill Some Silverstone Some Thermaltake and Some Xigmatek Right now I'm looking at 200R, Fractal Midi R2 (way out of my budget, but I'm trying my best to save up), Bitfenix Ronin or N600 Update Final decision would be posted after I've got my budget for my build, will be around February though. Hopefully, GTX 960 would be released at that date and be available here to enhance the value of my system. Cheers! These 3 came up to be my picks as of now: NZXT S340 @ $78 , one thing that keeps me from not buying this was the easily scratched side window and top matte, also no front fan intakes, I won't AIO. Arc Midi R2 @ $96 Corsair Vengeance C70 on sale @ $107
-
Hi Guys, (Yep, I'm new here, greetings sirs & ladies) I had some thoughts & questions I'd like cleared up on the new R5 case, as I'm looking to get one, but I'm unsure of a few things in relation to the R4. Reasons for buying are many in comparison to my current 650D. [No USB3 passthroughs, quieter, modularity etc..] I'd like input from anyone that uses an R5 at the moment. (I guess technically, anyone that has also had a chance to compare the two cases) First, the top ModUVents. They're a great idea, love modularity in cases, but wouldn't their offset mounting holes theoretically let MORE sound out of the case than the R4's centered dual 120mm top grills? I would be putting a 240mm radiator up top in my R5, and I noticed that because of the offset mounting points for such a config (240mm rad or two 120mm fans), there will be a significant gap of uncovered grill space left open on the right side. Picture below to show what I mean: I appreciate the offset mounting, don't get me wrong (push/pull might work for me now with the extra added clearance from RAM heatsinks because of offsetting), but I'm surprised this area isn't able to be covered with a third narrow modUvent panel. Does this have a significant impact on the silence of the case? Second, the bottom-of-the-case fan grills (3 of them in the R5, vs 2 in the R4) Picture below**. Wouldn't the addition of an additional fan grille increase possible noise bleed from the case? Especially when that third additional grille is added right under noise-producing front intake fans and an HDDcage? Looking forward to hearing your input. My eyes are set on the R5 right now, and I don't really see myself changing my mind unless there's another equally stellar case option (although I think I've researched enough and seen most all of em'), I'm more curious on how these new design decisions affect the actual silence of the case, and why they were made. tl:dr = More holes (than R4) would mean more noise, no? Thanks all! -alex
-
BitFenix has come out with another chassis and this one looks VERY promising! TONS of watercooling support, interesting features and great looks to boot! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gw92Vrrk9Ig#t=142 Here's the link and launch trailer: http://www.bitfenix.com/global/en/products/chassis/aegis/
-
Hi. I am looking for a nice case for my current build. I looking at 2 cases specifically, but I am open to more suggestions. I though of the S340 because of its great looks, good airflow, great build quality, great cable management and also the basement which makes any build look really tidy. On the other hand, I am looking at the 350D. It has great build quality and cable management along with a really elegant look. I thought of it because it is an matx chassis and I own an matx mobo ( Gigabyte H97M D3H ). My question is: Which one do you think will offer a better experience plus a better look?Aesthetics are really important to me. I really hate something expensive looking ugly.
-
NCIX: http://bit.ly/1Gu84gF Amazon: http://geni.us/xjM The Phanteks Enthoo EVOLV looked like a pretty appealing case, so we decided to give it the oldschool Linus unboxing treatment...
-
So i have a relatively small desk and i need the space, But mainly i need to fix a serious problem, My Desktop Mic, There is odd noises being sent into it and it's the vibration of the Case being on my desk and if it was on the ground it would not happen, So i am asking if there is ANY threat to my Computer if it is always sitting on the Carpet next to my desk, I hope someone or more people can help and i thank you in advance.
-
Hey guys, so I've been looking at some cases recently and noticed quite a few modern cases provide these circular cut-outs for water cooling pipes? Could someone please link me a picture or video as to how these are properly utilized? I'd hate to have you guys think that I'm plain lazy by not doing it myself, but I can't even figure where to start searching for such information . Thanks Case example (my main prospect): Zalman Z3 Plus
- 4 replies
-
- water cooling
- cooling
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with: