It's been a minute. I designed and built the B35 in 2017 to serve my needs at the time, which revolved around CAD for work and school, and it served me well in that capacity. To recap:
I honestly haven't had any issues with this setup, but once I started working and using company-issued computers I found myself using it less and less, and when I wanted to get into gaming I couldn't really use it. So for the most part, it sat in its pelican case for the past little while. And while I still love how the case turned out, I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with it for the following reasons:
I will have to take a slightly different approach. The B35 features 3 60mm intake fans on the bottom which help cool the VRMs and RAM, but on the other side of the case are currently doing nothing. I will use these fans to cool the A4000 via 2 3D-printed ducts as shown:
Still need to finalize the duct designs once the A4000 comes in as I intend to reuse the stock heatsink and shroud. The GUnique will be modified with additional wiring for PCIe power and the 300W external brick will be replaced with a modified 500W unit. A new PCIe gen 4 riser will be needed to run the A4000, but everything else should be pretty straight forward. I haven't decided whether to go with 12th gen i7 or i5 for the build, but leaning towards i5 due to reports of the 12700K running a little hot. This is the current component list:
CPU: Intel i7 7700K
Motherboard: Asus Strix Z270i Gaming
RAM: G.Skill TridentZ RGB 32GB 3200
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i
GPU: Nvidia Quadro P2000
PSU: 300W G-Unique Type-A (300W)
Storage: Samsung 960 Evo 1TB NVMe SSD
Cooling: 3x NF-A6x25 PWM
I honestly haven't had any issues with this setup, but once I started working and using company-issued computers I found myself using it less and less, and when I wanted to get into gaming I couldn't really use it. So for the most part, it sat in its pelican case for the past little while. And while I still love how the case turned out, I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with it for the following reasons:
- Cable management from the original build sucks
- The blower fan of the P2000 is very loud and annoying, even at the lowest 44% setting
- The 300W restriction is very limiting
- No space for any modern GPU*
I will have to take a slightly different approach. The B35 features 3 60mm intake fans on the bottom which help cool the VRMs and RAM, but on the other side of the case are currently doing nothing. I will use these fans to cool the A4000 via 2 3D-printed ducts as shown:
Still need to finalize the duct designs once the A4000 comes in as I intend to reuse the stock heatsink and shroud. The GUnique will be modified with additional wiring for PCIe power and the 300W external brick will be replaced with a modified 500W unit. A new PCIe gen 4 riser will be needed to run the A4000, but everything else should be pretty straight forward. I haven't decided whether to go with 12th gen i7 or i5 for the build, but leaning towards i5 due to reports of the 12700K running a little hot. This is the current component list:
CPU: Intel i5 12600K or i7 12700K (undecided)
Motherboard: Asus Strix Z690i Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB 32GB 5400
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i Chromax
GPU: Nvidia A4000
PSU: 300W G-Unique Type-A (500W)
Storage: Samsung 960 Evo 1TB NVMe SSD
Cooling: 3x NF-A6x25 PWM
Updates to follow in the coming weeks!