Cooler Cases 148
xopher
found a site that actually has some pretty
cool looking cases.
Some of the models are pretty sweet. If you can't afford one
of those new SGI boxes, join the club. But
you could consider one of these, although they don't have
prices listed.
No full tower models (Score:1)
~Nik
HP Kayaks (Score:1)
The SGI seems really nice, though. I'd like to get my hands on a 320, as they seem VERY price competitive with other vendors, but have an AWESOME architecture.
Oh, and if you just want a cool case: sandpaper and krylon, baby!
Silent cases (Score:1)
www.enlitecorp.com
They dont sell full towers though =(
You mean you have a case? (Score:1)
Even better case... (Score:1)
wooden cases - URL (Score:1)
Food for thought (Score:1)
I kept thinking of a crazed steel framework thing- you'd have to like the sounds of drives whining (2 IBM SCSI drives here) but it might provide useful information on what they're up to (read: chris is apparently an ultranerd
Currently I'm doing the opposite- I have a dualboot Mac and have treated the inside of the case with strips of duct tape, each of which has a string of Mortite down it. Damping each panel made the case very quiet.
The steel frame (or copper tubing, that's fun to do with pipe fittings and a torch and solder
Case On + Lots of Fans == More Cooling (Score:1)
All of this depends on your case design, of course. For example, cooling in the InWin cases is kind of iffy. The newest InWin towers have enough space for three fans in addition to the power supply fan and that does help, but their front bezel needs some more vent space and they don't need all those open vents on the side and top. (They need some, but not as much as they have). On the other hand, this crappy no-name generic case I have here at home is a terrible case but it keeps my drives cool as ice with its big front vents blowing straight into the drive bays.
-- Eric
California PC Products makes good cases (Score:1)
They do look industrial, though -- heavy-gauge painted steel all the way. Can't change that basic industrial look no matter what color you paint it.
-- E
Troll? (Score:1)
Self Built Cases (Score:1)
Towers vs Desktop (Score:1)
Am I the only person on this planet that prefers a desktop case over a tower?
-Sam
Here is a case for you gearheads! (Score:1)
http://www.yeongyang.com/yy0110.html
I'm getting one for my next upgrade!
_jon
BeBox case is still the coolest, though. (Score:1)
I have one BeBox [be.com] at home, these things are as cool as cases get. Although they only have 2 external and 2-3 internal bays. -jon
You mean you have a case? (Score:1)
Depending on the internal structure of your components, you might run cooler with the case on. I've seen a few cases that were designed with airflow through the case in mind.
And a couple of my computers have cases. The ones I run as servers do, at least. I set them up with their hardware, put in the services I needed, and left them to gether uptime. :) My "tinkering" computer, however... I think the case is around somewhere.
--Phil (Packard Bells seem to have fairly nice cases. Too bad that's the only good thing about them.)
Cool? (Score:1)
Cases schmases (Score:1)
I don't use floppy disks but once every few months, and I can easily put the CD-ROMs I use regularly (usually just my Starcraft CD-ROM) in one of those ATAPI changers...
Won't have to worry about cases, then, at all.
And for those lovely occasions where a hard reset is required (my head is Win98, though I have a Linux box on the LAN), it shouldn't be hard to use some telephone wire and wire up the reset pins on the motherboard and/or power switch to one of those cool key-operated safety pushbutton switches in my living room.
Self Built Cases (Score:1)
Easy Access = Its the Door Stupid (Score:1)
Of course, I love some of the HP server cases too. They're great to play with, if only because they have enough room to crawl inside and still have space for a comfy chair.
Apple does neat stuff with their cases, but I hate the way they try to avoid good old fashioned screws and bolts. I know that a screw will work, and I will always remember how to get it open in a panic situation. Those crafty snaps and latches the Mac-boys love either break on their own, or get bashed by me when I need to get the hard drive out and I can't remember the secret knock that makes the case disassemble itself.
Mutliple motherboard cases (Score:1)
I guess in something like that, heat would become a problem a little quicker, but it'd still be cool.
Something along the lines of an old file cabinet gutted and rebuilt.
Colour cases (Score:1)
The new PowerMac G3 cases are nicer (Score:1)
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
115W AGP cards coming soon (Score:1)
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
Colour cases (Score:1)
HP Kayaks (Score:1)
You don't need the sandpaper. My friend
didn't use any.
Fishing wire? (Score:1)
Kind of Cool (Score:1)
They're ugly! (Score:1)
Still no El Capitans/Yosemities/iMacs, but these are very nice. Great for those who stick with Intels for whatever reason.
I wanna Lego Case... (Score:1)
Of course, If I built a lego case, I'd feel obligated to buy the Mindstorm robotics kits and build a robotic arm on the top that would turn the machine on and off on command!
Non-lethal cases with colour - yay! (Score:1)
On a related topic, does anyone know where one can get a black desktop (not tower) case that doesn't look like crap? I'm looking for something to put my mp3 server into...
Give me a NeXT Cube! (Score:1)
Self Built Cases (Score:1)
I'm still looking towards building a custom case (If I could find some good plans). I'm thinking of putting multiple fans in the side to help vent the heat of all the cards - these new video cards seem to run exceptionally hot.
Anyway, I think I'll keep looking.
Who cares what the case looks like? (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Intel Concept PCs (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Black Cases, Do they exist? (Score:1)
http://www.kricomputer.com/yy0210.htm
Mail ordered it, came in like 3 days. Well made case, has drive bays and motherboard areas separated. Spot for two fans on the front,
lots of drive bays. Built for ATX boards.
I love it! Just need a black MS Natural Keyboard to match!
Typical OSS crap (Score:1)
Personally I was under the impression that it was the other way around, that the one good thing about Windows software was that it looked good.
I will admit that, for instance, GIMP doesn't have as much out-of-the-box functionality as Photoshop... but that will correct itself, given time and the favor of the patent laws.
Window Maker, on the other hand, does look really sweet... and I like it better than Explorer. Wow. Best of both worlds!
ElpDragon.
Intel Concept PCs (Score:2)
They suck! (Score:1)
Geek is ok, but go with style.
What sits on my desk... (Score:1)
PII 400, and a G3 (I have to support the Mac users
too, so they bought me one. boo-hoo
looking, even for a beige box, sits on the desk.
Just from the discussions here, it looks like the market is ripe for a GOOD pc case company. Startup, anyone?
Coffee maker? No problem! (Score:1)
American kitsch (Score:1)
They're a perfect example of a distinctly American
type of kitsch, the 'decorations' (a good-looking
box doesn't NEED decoration) on the box look
like the decorations on cowboy boots and I can
hear the country music coming out of those ugly
boxes....
(not to say that Europeans or Asians don't have
their own kitsch)
Sander
High-end? (Score:1)
High-end? (Score:1)
After cooling everything down and reinstalling it worked again. I'm writing this with that very same K6 and it works flawlessly.
Give me a NeXT Cube! (Score:1)
The problems with NeXTcubes were manifold. First of all, I don't know if you can fit an ATX motherboard in there, because there is an enormous shared bus acting as a backplane. Logic boards slide into the bus sideways and access it that way. The hard drives and power supply plug into the shared bus in different places as well. To put an ATX motherboard in there would probably mean removing the shared bus, but then you wouldn't have a locking mechanism for the various parts. You can't screw anything in easily, because you'd have to drill a hole in thick metal.
The shared bus means, however, that you can plug in multiple motherboards. With some configuration of the O/S, of course. (This was in 1989, mind you -- years before Linux SMP.) The air flow in that machine was terrible. The old Winchester full-heights got HOT
Oddly enough, I've heard a lot of complaints about the lack of expandability in cubes. I never found that a problem because I could always daisy-chain my SCSI devices externally. NeXTs used standard SCSI-1, I might add, nothing mutant like the old MicroVAX II...
Ah, those were the days.
Addtronics (Score:1)
Apple El'Capitan Case still best out there.. (Score:2)
(no M$ ever, no Intel AMD & VIA)
I hate scraping my knuckles on the poorly built
Aztec and Enlight cases. I want a cases that
gives me easy access to my MB, while it is running.
Apple G3 case [apple.com] is entirely usable. I like haveing a few more colors in my workspace, sure it will be tacky in 3 years but so will my computer.
Easy access, The Handles I like as they prevent it
from actually resting on the floor, for those occasional spills. Being able to open while running is way cool! Sure it runs a little cooler when you run with no case, but you dust death rate goes way up....
Now Apple needs to offer the case without the logo... and with holes for ATX form factor. Then I could have a decent PC case.
If your fan works correctly.... (Score:1)
case off..
first time that happened, i was really scared so i put it in my freezer with the case off, it took 1/2 hour to cool that thing off properly (didn't want too cold as to have condensation occuring)
don't worry, he's buying a new case + MB anyway
Silent cases (Score:1)
Silent hard drives are important. I don't want a pair of Cheetahs waking me up in the middle of the night from cron jobs.
Dull (Score:1)
Case on = more heat, period. Usually (Score:1)
Actually, if you try and do that to certain SGIs (notably indigos and indies) they run a whole lot hotter because there is no airflow to certain parts of the machine that require forced air cooling. Can't remember exactly which parts at the moment. When the techs for SGI showed up, and we were running without the case for more than an hour, we would put the cover on, upside down to let the air move.
Doesn't matter in PC's, as the standard case design is mostly open, but in tight spaces, you can use the boards as baffles to direct the airflow.
Bah... (Score:1)
_Deirdre
Spontaneously combusting cases (poof!) (Score:1)
I would *not* use polyurinate (as the rec.ww folks refer to it) for this due to the possibility of toxic fumes. Probably a light shellac would be best.
_Deirdre
Double edged sword. (Score:1)
_Deirdre
Fishing wire? (Score:2)
--Dast
A list of problems with my "sleek" case (Score:1)
PROBLEM #1 (three months after purchase) the CD ROM they installed broke, so I had to replace it. I discovered that with the fancy case I had to take the whole thing apart to get it out. So I added the new CD ROM below it and let it sit there.
PROBELM #2
Now that my computer was hideously ugly and mismatched, I kept the door slid up constantly. But the doors and mecahnisms they use on these cases SUCK, so soon the door snapped and no longer slides up, stuck half way looked even tackier, so I had to remove it.
PROBLEM #3
Not enough bays: I bought a CDR a few months later. But there were not enough drive bays with the irremovable CD ROM, so I had to take it apart to get it off, and cut my thumb open pretty good doing it.
PROBLEM #4
I put in the new CDR in the stop slot once i finally got the fancy Sony CD ROM out, and discovered that the front of the Sony was one plastic piece that was attached to the floppy. I had to remove that piece in order to replace the CD ROM, so now my floppy is this ugly piece of black plastic that doesnt match anything. You can also peek into the computer through the area surrounding the floppy due to odd case construction.
OTHER PROBLEMS
In addition to this, I spilt soda in the keyboard and had to replace it with a standard Logitech one, which does not match the case either. Compounding the ugly mess is the wheel mouse I replaced the tiny one that came with it. I will never a buy a non-beige case again.. Maybe these cases will allow for better upgrades, but I won't risk it until I can be sure everything looks sexy and sleek together.. You just need to run Enlightenment and no one will look at your ugly case
Self Built Cases (Score:1)
Harlequin
They're too small... (Score:1)
I think I'll stick with "putty" until I figure out how to put a nice wood veneer on my current case. What's Norm Abrams' e-mail address?
They still look like crap (Score:1)
Someone needs to make a high quality case of out quality materials that isn't just a piece of plastic hot glued to the side of a BOX.
Oh wait some one did! Apple!! Imagine that...
That new G3 case puts anything else to shame. It has easier access then anything else on the market (beer box guy not included
I'll give a site like this colorcase place a second look when they do somthing new.
Double edged sword. (Score:1)
sorry to say.. (Score:1)
well i saw one up here in the northern va area at a computer show, and i was looking for a case and this guy that was selling them, was selling them cheap, so i bought one. let me just say.. THEY SUCK!! i hate the two button at, atx config, and don't get me started on the freakin' door that kept wanting to break off.. i was so pissed and drenched in kerosine and promptly burned it.. it was lovely.. went back to my lovely beige case. you don't know you miss it until you set your new case on fire.
"this message has been designed for the thinking impaired."
But when you upgrade... (Score:1)
You mean you have a case? (Score:2)
If you have a fan six inches away from your CPU in open air, some of that air will get to your cpu. If you have a pipe (or any enclosed area) between your fan and your cpu, all of that air will get to your cpu.
The more air your CPU gets, the cooler it will be. Even if the air inside the case is a few degrees warmer than the air in your room.
CPUs run better when they are cool, so put the case back on your machine.
cool cases (Score:1)
brett
Ah've seen bettah! (Score:1)
www.rockcity.net has some REALLY original looking computers. I wish they'd sell just the cases.
Tech-wise their complete PCs are either too expensive (PII) or not too impressive. Oh, and the site has been "under construction" for far too long to inspire confidence.
I think I'll settle for the old beige box (Score:1)
If you want art, buy art. Let cases be cases.
Double edged sword. (Score:1)
I guess if you really wanted to, you could swap cases with a new G3 owner who thinks that the case is the worst looking case ever.
Actually, that would be a change... a PC in a blue G3 box... hmmm
Another - not so ugly - case site. (Score:1)
Self Built Cases (Score:1)
Unless of course you like the idea of a spontaneously combusting case
Spontaneously combusting cases (poof!) (Score:1)
problem if the case he made was wooden, but for some reason I tend to think that cardboard burns at a lot lower temp. than 450F, but i could be wrong...
High-end? (Score:1)
Not to be petty or anything.
A better place to get cases (Score:1)
Towers? NO. PizzaBox? NO. (Score:1)
THANK YOU! (Score:1)
Black Cases, Do they exist? (Score:1)
that I can put my drives behind because they
dont have black face plates.
Anyone know of any?
Coolness where it counts.... (Score:1)
iMac Case - maybe not so cool in the long run (Score:1)
Some acquaintances at Apple actually tried to get Steve Jobs to change his mind for the design that became the iMac production case. Since they are analog and monitor types, they are familliar with the guts of a CRT, working with them daily. They were agast that Jobs intended to show off yoke portion of the monitor through those 'sexy' blue windows in the top.
The guys wheeled a monitor on an AV cart into Jobs office, turned it around, and pulled the back off of the monitor. They said "In one year this is what our customers will see through those blue windows in the iMac." For those of you who have never opened up your monitor (as Jobs probably never had) let me tell you what he saw - a CRT fuzzy with a grey carpet of dust. It turns out the high voltage of a CRTs is a magnet for dust.
I know that this may not be of any concern to most of you since most computers have the monitor separate from the CPU, but you do still have dust build-up in the processor box, and a clear case of any kind will show that off right away. (I know, most of you upgrade your gear so quick it doesn't have time to get dusty.)
Just thought you would like one more anectdote to add to the voluminous corpus of Steve Jobs lore, and to remind you that some products that are visually appealing on the showroom floor sometimes don't age well.
I wanna Lego Case... (Score:1)
An added bonus of a Lego case would be the time you could kill during those huge downloads (hey, we don't all have cable modems, T1's, or whatever).
PS Anybody know whether those flat pads come in anything beside green, grey, and blue?
How 'bout some custom artwork? (Score:1)
Take a look at the left side [tbf.net] and the right side [tbf.net] of my case. These are ~150k jpgs and were taken right before I put it back on my machine.
And yes, my brother is taking orders for them.
John.
Addtronics (Score:1)
And if you're reading this, you definitely want the casters. They give you the ability to pull out your case much more easily (or put it out of the way where it goes much more easily)! You probably want them even if you never close the case...
Just a happy customer...
Double edged sword. (Score:1)
The (vaguely related) thing I really hate is SCSI cable makers who make their cable plugs such that you have to run the cable to the top of your case, then down the bays--or alternately, have only a between-drives length of cable between the host adapter and the first drive. Ecch. Plug it in the right way (and probably waste a plug), or plug it in backwards and probably waste a plug anyway. What a choice...
Addtronics (Score:1)
(Found a use for the 5.25" bay above the power supply? Or did you get the 7890?)
Classic literature you've forgotten (Score:1)
Case on = more heat, but ventilation works. (Score:1)
If the case is open, the CPU and the power supply (and anything else with a fan blowing on it) will still be cooled. Everywhere else, the air will stagnate (or just move very slowly), your hot chips will waft heat up towards your hot hard drives, and your hot hard drives will just get hotter. While your CPU may register a few degrees cooler (as the fan can blow air from the room across it), but nothing else gets much airflow, so the other $1500 of your $2000 system suffers.
ATX PSU fans that blow in on the CPU are okay for a desktop IMHO, but those don't tend to be heavily expanded. For a tower, you should have as many or more fans blowing out the top back as you have blowing in the front, especially if you have a self-cooking hard drive without a fan on it.