Needs another 10mm or so.Just curious, would an mATX board fit in an NCase M1 with one more slot, if you had an SFX bracket that put an SFX PSU right up against the front wall? Or would you need to make the case longer too?
Needs another 10mm or so.Just curious, would an mATX board fit in an NCase M1 with one more slot, if you had an SFX bracket that put an SFX PSU right up against the front wall? Or would you need to make the case longer too?
Widened it by 10mm so it can fit 2.5 slot GPUs and a 70mm CPU cooler. A few more renders:
I have to admit it's got some sex appeal. Sleek, modern, and compact. Doesn't look like a typical PC, yet can still pack the punch of a full gaming rig. I could see it appealing to some people.
It's possible, and in fact that's exactly what the Corsair One does. This concept would already require a flex riser, since it's back-to-back like the A4, Ghost etc. The challenge is that it needs to be bent in a very particular, somewhat awkward way to achieve the One's layout, and I'm not sure that's such a great idea. I already don't really trust them to perform reliably, and they seem delicate enough that incorporating one into a case for DIY'ers (as opposed to a prebuilt like the One) where they're likely to get bent repeatedly seems like it's asking for problems. These risers are $60+ parts, remember, so that extra cost plus the potential reliability concerns leaves me not entirely keen on the idea.Would it be possible to flip the Motherboard, so that the I/O is at the Back of the case, and use a flexible Riser like this one [https://www.thermaltake.com/Chassis...T_Premium_PCI_E_3_0_Extender_300mm/design.htm] to keep the GPU in the vertical orientation with the I/O on the Bottom?
I mean, i for my part use the rear I/O of my Motherboard multiple times a day, whereas i rarely ever need to access the GPU I/O. That would be a lot more practical if you ask me.
I would make a model in SketchUp to explain, but my skills are terrible at best. I hope i could convey what i mean.
Greetings
It's possible, and in fact that's exactly what the Corsair One does. This concept would already require a flex riser, since it's back-to-back like the A4, Ghost etc. The challenge is that it needs to be bent in a very particular, somewhat awkward way to achieve the One's layout, and I'm not sure that's such a great idea. I already don't really trust them to perform reliably, and they seem delicate enough that incorporating one into a case for DIY'ers (as opposed to a prebuilt like the One) where they're likely to get bent repeatedly seems like it's asking for problems. These risers are $60+ parts, remember, so that extra cost plus the potential reliability concerns leaves me not entirely keen on the idea.
That is a nice coffee maker. The Shuttle concept though are still good looking.
so when will we have moveable transforming itx cases?