Building a new PC. Recommend me some cases.
#1
Elite Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 10,470
Total Cats: 1,812
Building a new PC. Recommend me some cases.
So the mobo is a F2A85-V PRO and the processor is a A10 6800k 4.1 quad core. Planning on sticking with maybe 16 gigs of ram even though the mobo supports 64 gigs.
AMD A10 6800K Black Edition 4.1GHz Quad-Core Socket FM2 Boxed Processor 613745 - Micro Center
ASUS F2A85-V Pro FM2 ATX AMD Motherboard 994640 - Micro Center
My current computer is running quite hot. Primary video card runs at 40 at idle and like 60-65 at full blast. 2nd video card runs at 50-60c on average since it runs 2 monitors at the same time. cpu idles at 30 and goes up to 55ish C.
I'm looking for a new case for the new setup that is focused on good air flow to drop down my temps as i'll be using the same video cards for now.
Currently looking at the corsair 540 air.
(random pic of the case)
AMD A10 6800K Black Edition 4.1GHz Quad-Core Socket FM2 Boxed Processor 613745 - Micro Center
ASUS F2A85-V Pro FM2 ATX AMD Motherboard 994640 - Micro Center
My current computer is running quite hot. Primary video card runs at 40 at idle and like 60-65 at full blast. 2nd video card runs at 50-60c on average since it runs 2 monitors at the same time. cpu idles at 30 and goes up to 55ish C.
I'm looking for a new case for the new setup that is focused on good air flow to drop down my temps as i'll be using the same video cards for now.
Currently looking at the corsair 540 air.
(random pic of the case)
#2
CM HAF 932 is what my main rig stays in. Very spacious, and more cooling options than you can shake a stick at.
Mine has the now discontinued side panel that is mostly just a window but the one you can buy now has a smaller window and mesh with a fan. I just built a new PC for someone using the new one and the side fan was not even needed. I think it looks a lot better without it anyways.
You can still custom order this side door like what came with mine.
Mine has the now discontinued side panel that is mostly just a window but the one you can buy now has a smaller window and mesh with a fan. I just built a new PC for someone using the new one and the side fan was not even needed. I think it looks a lot better without it anyways.
You can still custom order this side door like what came with mine.
#4
Elite Member
iTrader: (12)
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Hermosa Beach, CA
Posts: 2,573
Total Cats: 12
Corsair Carbide Series 500R White Steel structure with molded ABS plastic accent pieces ATX Mid Tower Computer Case - Newegg.com
Love the look of the case and with the current price it is a smoking deal. I currently use a HAF 932 and it works great, full tower can be a pain sometimes through.
Love the look of the case and with the current price it is a smoking deal. I currently use a HAF 932 and it works great, full tower can be a pain sometimes through.
#5
Elite Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 10,470
Total Cats: 1,812
Been looking at more and more cases. Frys screwed me on the 540 case. They had it for sale for 82 bucks, i was on back order, then they got it in stock and bumped the price to 140 and told me that i'll have to pay the difference, i told them to **** them selves.
I'm thinking i might add a separator where my top graphics card is so the cpu gets its own air supply that always goes, and then the graphics cards get an inlet through the side, exhaust through the front and rear.
I'm thinking i might add a separator where my top graphics card is so the cpu gets its own air supply that always goes, and then the graphics cards get an inlet through the side, exhaust through the front and rear.
#7
Elite Member
iTrader: (13)
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Taos, New mexico
Posts: 6,760
Total Cats: 631
Baller internals + welfare case = winning rig. I've got the most simple, rectangular, mid tower I could find on newegg. It's all black, has plenty of fan provisions and space, and sits in the corner of the room very inconspicuously.
#8
Elite Member
iTrader: (5)
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Detroit (the part with no rules or laws)
Posts: 5,683
Total Cats: 805
I don't have anything to recommend; This is why.
I have only ever bought once case. It was the best case at the time i could buy. I paid a lot. I got my money's worth. You really do get what you pay for IMO.
I've got friends that buy them fancy looking plastic "clip on" style cases and they're all junk.
I have only ever bought once case. It was the best case at the time i could buy. I paid a lot. I got my money's worth. You really do get what you pay for IMO.
I've got friends that buy them fancy looking plastic "clip on" style cases and they're all junk.
#9
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,339
Total Cats: 6,793
My experience largely mirrors Erat's. I've never spent a huge amount of money on a case, but I do tend to shop in the midrange, and eschew fancy plastic doo-dads in favor of competent engineering.
In particular, I've had good luck with CoolerMaster cases. Some of them are ho-hum, but many have front panels which are 100% mesh, and provisions on the back for quite a good amount of airflow as well. For instance:
Newegg.com - Cooler Master Elite 330U - Mid Tower Computer Case with 350W Power Supply
(Obviously the power supply is not adequate for your needs, I'd consider that a throwaway.)
Protip #1: Remove all the metal from the areas which I circled- a Dremel with the little cutoff wheel works well for this. This will reduce noise.
Protip #2: Pop out the metal covers over all the drive bays. More airflow.
Protip #3: Unless you are absolutely, 100% certain that you need to put an exhaust fan in one of them to draw hot air away from a video card, block off any side / top / bottom vents. If you let air be drawn into them, this will generally not be as beneficial to the CPU and GPUs as air drawn in through the front of the case. (Consider how a rear-thermostat coolant reroute works on the Miata. Same concept applies here.)
Protip #4: When you install that big, fancy heatpipe cooler on your CPU, orient it such that air flows from front to rear, with the exhaust aimed right at that 120mm rear case fan.
Protip #5: Make absolutely certain that the rear fan is properly oriented, such that it's blowing outward. I've seen them backwards before. If you choose to install a front case fan (you probably don't need one), the opposite applies.
In particular, I've had good luck with CoolerMaster cases. Some of them are ho-hum, but many have front panels which are 100% mesh, and provisions on the back for quite a good amount of airflow as well. For instance:
Newegg.com - Cooler Master Elite 330U - Mid Tower Computer Case with 350W Power Supply
(Obviously the power supply is not adequate for your needs, I'd consider that a throwaway.)
Protip #1: Remove all the metal from the areas which I circled- a Dremel with the little cutoff wheel works well for this. This will reduce noise.
Protip #2: Pop out the metal covers over all the drive bays. More airflow.
Protip #3: Unless you are absolutely, 100% certain that you need to put an exhaust fan in one of them to draw hot air away from a video card, block off any side / top / bottom vents. If you let air be drawn into them, this will generally not be as beneficial to the CPU and GPUs as air drawn in through the front of the case. (Consider how a rear-thermostat coolant reroute works on the Miata. Same concept applies here.)
Protip #4: When you install that big, fancy heatpipe cooler on your CPU, orient it such that air flows from front to rear, with the exhaust aimed right at that 120mm rear case fan.
Protip #5: Make absolutely certain that the rear fan is properly oriented, such that it's blowing outward. I've seen them backwards before. If you choose to install a front case fan (you probably don't need one), the opposite applies.
#10
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,339
Total Cats: 6,793
I ask because for a machine with multiple dedicated GPUs, the 6800k APU seems like an extremely odd processor choice, as compared to something in the FX class, or better yet, an i5/i7.
#11
Elite Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 10,470
Total Cats: 1,812
Getting it from a friend. I've been looking into the fortress FT04 cases Bit pricey but very noise proofed and good flow.
Was hoping to stay around 150 on the case. The temjin is nice but 400 bucks is a bit much.
Was hoping to stay around 150 on the case. The temjin is nice but 400 bucks is a bit much.
#12
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,339
Total Cats: 6,793
Ah.
Well, buy this for $40: Newegg.com - Cooler Master N300 - Mid Tower Computer Case with Meshed Front Panel
(the entire front panel is nothing but air intake)
Then spend another $70 on a power supply to feed what I presume to be a laughably power-hungry array of APU and GPUs, and maybe a few bucks extra on the loudest exhaust fan money can buy for the side (close off the top entirely), and there you have it.
Was hoping to stay around 150 on the case. The temjin is nice but 400 bucks is a bit much.
(the entire front panel is nothing but air intake)
Then spend another $70 on a power supply to feed what I presume to be a laughably power-hungry array of APU and GPUs, and maybe a few bucks extra on the loudest exhaust fan money can buy for the side (close off the top entirely), and there you have it.
#14
Elite Member
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 5,155
Total Cats: 407
This is a nice mid-tower, I have one. My main rig was in it until I got my HAF. Now my guest gaming rig is in it.
The filtyer on the front is super helpful. If you make the x2 120mm fans on the front the only intakes it will stay pretty clean inside. When it gets clogged you can just swing it open and vacuum it out or w/e.
I love the HAF, but its not perfect. There are things I miss about the Antec (like the filter), but I really wanted a full tower and the HAF is the bang-for-buck full tower imo.
The filtyer on the front is super helpful. If you make the x2 120mm fans on the front the only intakes it will stay pretty clean inside. When it gets clogged you can just swing it open and vacuum it out or w/e.
I love the HAF, but its not perfect. There are things I miss about the Antec (like the filter), but I really wanted a full tower and the HAF is the bang-for-buck full tower imo.
#16
Elite Member
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 5,155
Total Cats: 407
I have the HAF 932, just like tw34k's but with the different side panel
It is very nice. Lots of room for big cards and HDDs. Plus there is a good gap behind the mobo tray so you can tuck all the wiring back there for improved airflow. It has 3 extra-big-*** fans that move lots of air and are completely silent.
If you can deal with it looking so big and ostentatious, its fantastic. If it had a filter screen in the front it would be perfect.
It is very nice. Lots of room for big cards and HDDs. Plus there is a good gap behind the mobo tray so you can tuck all the wiring back there for improved airflow. It has 3 extra-big-*** fans that move lots of air and are completely silent.
If you can deal with it looking so big and ostentatious, its fantastic. If it had a filter screen in the front it would be perfect.
#20
Elite Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 10,470
Total Cats: 1,812
There was another one. The case was black but inside was orange with orange mesh for the vents. The contrast looked very good.
Found it.
Corsair Carbide Series Air 540 Cube Case - Custom Dual Radiator Series - FrozenCPU.com
Found it.
Corsair Carbide Series Air 540 Cube Case - Custom Dual Radiator Series - FrozenCPU.com