Ok. I just finished my build, moving from the Dan A4-SFX to the MI-6
The build was easy once I read the suggested build order. Can't believe I pulled at ID-10-T error on that.
Fit and finish of the case is superb. It’s the best looking case I own (and I own a lot of cases!). The attention to detail in design, packaging, and the included parts easily rivals that of Dan and NCASE. Everyone who has seen it, loves it.
I figured I would post some temps I’m seeing. This is not a review of the case, but more an example build.
Here is a recap of the specs:
Intel I7-8700 Non-K (4.3GHZ max turbo on all 6 cores).
Asus Z370 ITX Stryx
32GB of Corsair DDR4-3200
MSI Geforce 1070 Aero ITX
Samsung EVO 960 NVME 2280 SSD
Seagate 2TB 2.5 Inch HD
Corsair 600 watt SFX PSU
Cooling
Noctua NH-L12 w/ 92MM bottom fan only (default intake mode). (Set to 100% as it's virtually inaudible)
Noctua 92mm slim fan as bottom intake. (Set to silent mode in BIOS, with the Noctua low noise adapter installed.)
Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut thermal paste.
Ambient temp was 72F.
Method:
NOTE: There was a flaw in the mainboard discovered after this was posted. Please see post 642.
For temperature tests, I played Battlefield 1 on 64 player conquest while also chatting on Discord for approximately 1 hour. Game was at 1440P on Ultra Settings. I used a GSYNC monitor that can display 165hz refresh. VSYNC off of course (Redundant with GSYNC) .
In order to get a solid 4.3GHZ on all 6 cores, under heavy load, I had to raise the CPUS max longterm and shorterm wattage allowed in the BIOS from 65 to 110 watts. For reference, I believe the 8700K is rated at 95 Watts.
I used MSI Afterburner to dial in a +200 OC on the 1070 core. I consistently saw 2.1 GHZ boost clock while playing.
Results:
Using the above listed set up, I consistently saw frame rates during intense gameplay in the 80s to low 90s. (1440P, Ultra)
The CPU was rock solid at 4.3GHZ per MSI Afterburner.
The CPU Temp spiked into the mid 90s at times, but stayed mostly in the high 80s. This is where a delid would be useful. My system did not lower it's turbo clock, but wow did it run hot.
The GPU stayed at about 75C under full load.
The front mounted hard drive never broke 40C, and was mostly at about 35C.
The NVME SSD was in the 50C to 60C range.
The top of the case got HOT to the touch under a gaming load. However, this is consistent with a GPU that dumps hot air back into the case. As such it wasn’t unexpected, and I saw the same behavior with the DAN A4-SFX. If an XL version of the case is ever designed, I would suggest just adding a top mounted 92x15 exhaust fan, making room for a 92x25 bottom mounted intake fan, and room for the newer Noctua NH-L12S by increasing the with a few mm.
Noise level was excellent in all conditions. I sit 2 feet from the system, with it on my left side facing me. At idle, it's barely audible. I strained to hear it. At load it was pretty quiet. I definitely could not hear it over the games.
Overall, great design, great looks, and I'm VERY happy with it. When I start doing some Premier work on it I will post some new thermal results.
The build was easy once I read the suggested build order. Can't believe I pulled at ID-10-T error on that.
Fit and finish of the case is superb. It’s the best looking case I own (and I own a lot of cases!). The attention to detail in design, packaging, and the included parts easily rivals that of Dan and NCASE. Everyone who has seen it, loves it.
I figured I would post some temps I’m seeing. This is not a review of the case, but more an example build.
Here is a recap of the specs:
Intel I7-8700 Non-K (4.3GHZ max turbo on all 6 cores).
Asus Z370 ITX Stryx
32GB of Corsair DDR4-3200
MSI Geforce 1070 Aero ITX
Samsung EVO 960 NVME 2280 SSD
Seagate 2TB 2.5 Inch HD
Corsair 600 watt SFX PSU
Cooling
Noctua NH-L12 w/ 92MM bottom fan only (default intake mode). (Set to 100% as it's virtually inaudible)
Noctua 92mm slim fan as bottom intake. (Set to silent mode in BIOS, with the Noctua low noise adapter installed.)
Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut thermal paste.
Ambient temp was 72F.
Method:
NOTE: There was a flaw in the mainboard discovered after this was posted. Please see post 642.
For temperature tests, I played Battlefield 1 on 64 player conquest while also chatting on Discord for approximately 1 hour. Game was at 1440P on Ultra Settings. I used a GSYNC monitor that can display 165hz refresh. VSYNC off of course (Redundant with GSYNC) .
In order to get a solid 4.3GHZ on all 6 cores, under heavy load, I had to raise the CPUS max longterm and shorterm wattage allowed in the BIOS from 65 to 110 watts. For reference, I believe the 8700K is rated at 95 Watts.
I used MSI Afterburner to dial in a +200 OC on the 1070 core. I consistently saw 2.1 GHZ boost clock while playing.
Results:
Using the above listed set up, I consistently saw frame rates during intense gameplay in the 80s to low 90s. (1440P, Ultra)
The CPU was rock solid at 4.3GHZ per MSI Afterburner.
The CPU Temp spiked into the mid 90s at times, but stayed mostly in the high 80s. This is where a delid would be useful. My system did not lower it's turbo clock, but wow did it run hot.
The GPU stayed at about 75C under full load.
The front mounted hard drive never broke 40C, and was mostly at about 35C.
The NVME SSD was in the 50C to 60C range.
The top of the case got HOT to the touch under a gaming load. However, this is consistent with a GPU that dumps hot air back into the case. As such it wasn’t unexpected, and I saw the same behavior with the DAN A4-SFX. If an XL version of the case is ever designed, I would suggest just adding a top mounted 92x15 exhaust fan, making room for a 92x25 bottom mounted intake fan, and room for the newer Noctua NH-L12S by increasing the with a few mm.
Noise level was excellent in all conditions. I sit 2 feet from the system, with it on my left side facing me. At idle, it's barely audible. I strained to hear it. At load it was pretty quiet. I definitely could not hear it over the games.
Overall, great design, great looks, and I'm VERY happy with it. When I start doing some Premier work on it I will post some new thermal results.
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