I worry for the tube connector part on the radiator though o_o are you sure it's doing fine over there?
I have recently finished building my A4SFX and really happy with the outcome. and did not know the it's possible to put the noctua fan on the bottom orienation so it's sucking fresh air on the bottom vents and blowing it directly to the rad
I think it would be great to see more custom loops in the A4meh just a fun idea.
Don't think it will be built.
I think it would be great to see more custom loops in the A4
Haha agreed. I have a 3 year old, and can’t seem to find time to tinker much, and having a custom loop could mean extended down time on a machine.Lol, well I just ordered a Synology NAS instead of trying to build one into my big Caselabs case.
Next I will be looking to rebuild my personal computer in ITX form.
I like the A4 alot but I also have the big XE360 rad that is only 10 months old so I may do an external rad setup or just sell it all off and go back to air.
Hard to have time to do maintenance on water loop with two kids under age of 3
Haha agreed. I have a 3 year old, and can’t seem to find time to tinker much, and having a custom loop could mean extended down time on a machine.
I have both the M1 and the A4. For regular use, I feel that the M1 easier to keep cool, and much more quiet. My M1 is mostly home use (6700K + 1080, C14 + Accelero3) with some rendering tasks here and there. I use my A4 as a tranportable workstation (8700K + Quadro P4000, LP53 with TY100 fan).Yea, so I just pulled the trigger today on a Synology DS918+ NAS which now makes keeping my M8 from Caselabs meaningless unless I do something like Threadripper with multiple gaming VMs....which sounds like a fun project but I think instead I am going to sell all my watercooling gear and the case and get an A4.
Was thinking NCase but I really like the A4 better.
If I get enough for the case and watercooling gear I might try and get something like a RTX2070 or 2080.
I'll probably go with the 2700X for the CPU though, I do alot of multitasking since this is also my work computer and being able to take a break from a spreadsheet for a few minutes or let a game continue to run in the background as I do some work is very beneficial to me since I am doing that all the time.
I'm not concerned with overclocking it but increasing the XFR range seems the better way to go.
Hi everyone,
So my Dan Case shipped on Aug 23 according to the email from sfflab. However the tracking info did not update at all since then. Did anyone have the same situation? The last tracking info from Aug 23 was “Original post is preparing shipment”. I live in NYS and paid for the 1-2 week shipping.
Pretty creative. What kind of temps you gettjng with that full size AIO?Hi there SFF forum!
This is my first post here and my first SFF build. I really loved the look of the DAN case and jumped on the opportunity to get the v2 when it was released. It took some time to put together the parts, but it is finally finished and I wanted to share it here. I work in motion graphics and illustration, so I needed a rig that would be up to the challenge of heavy AE, C4D, and illustration software (primarily PS and AI). The combination of lots of power in a small container lead to some challenges, but in the end, I'm satisfied with the results.
Here is a link to some photos of the final build: https://flic.kr/s/aHsmrz2cF9
Here are the specs for my machine:
- Asrock X299E-ITX/AC MB
- i9 7900x CPU (overclocked - though only slightly due to my limited understanding of proper overclocking)
- 64gb Corsair Vengeance DDR4 SO-DIMM RAM
- Silverstone SST-SX650W SFX PSU
- EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 GPU
- Corsair H115i Pro 280mm AIO
- Custom designed and 3D printed enclosure for the AIO
I designed and 3D printed a box with a perforated pattern similar to that on the vented sides to house the AIO. The supports (which are screwed into the holes for the feet) keep the case from moving and create a single, solid unit that can be picked up and moved without fear of damage to the case or AIO. The rubber feet were then repurposed to lift the AIO box up off the ground for further air flow. I modified the case slighty to allow access for the AIO hoses, cutting out a piece from the bottom (where the hard drives would sit) and a very small piece from the front panel. Neither modification is noticable from the outside. I also shortened all the power cables to allow for more space below the PSU.
The only thing I haven't done is connect the front USB cable to the MB. I am waiting on a right-angle USB 3.0 MB adapter from modDIY to come in.
I realize that the DAN C4-SFX is going to drop here in the near future, but I wanted to work with what I had available. I may transfer my setup into a C4 (with some modifications to the AIO and any other parts that may not fit), but for now I excited to move away from the giant box of a machine that lives under my desk.
yes so basically you just need to buy the thin line usb cable and it should fit into v2 easilyHow did he do it? Is there some post about it?
Does anyone know where one could pickup the 120mm aio bracket included with V3...? I have V2
yes so basically you just need to buy the thin line usb cable and it should fit into v2 easily
Thanks!Pretty creative. What kind of temps you gettjng with that full size AIO?