Posted on December 15, 2004
Conclusion
Gluing the front onto the case.
The extension cord for the network jack. As I said before, I didn't want the end of the motherboard sticking out of one of the sides. Instead, I put in jacks for the power and the network cables. Most of the time, the box isn't leaving runlevel 3. There's a removable panel for times when I need to hook up a mouse, keyboard, and monitor.
Power cable extension.
And here they are installed in the case.
The bottom of the case. You can see the power and hard drive LEDs, the power switch for the neon, the air intake, network and power jacks, and the hole for keyboard, mouse, and monitor cables.
I made the legs out of poplar and applied a cherry veneer. I had originally thought it would be cool to put a cherry veneer on the side panels, but found that the veneer warped the heck out of the Sintra.
The entire case is lined with some form of 1/2 inch thick foam. Here's the inside of one of the side panels. That's 1/8 inch hobby foam and half inch thick foam from a play mat. I gotta tell you, building this PC helped me with memorizing the alphabet. ;)
The guts. I ended up with enough leftover EL wire on the inside that I was able to detail the fan on the power supply. You can't see it but the motherboard is behind the hard drive mount. The ribbon cable folded up nicely inside the mount.
Sometime soon I've gotta do something to clean up the cables inside a little more.
The black box on the upper left is something I came up with for controlling the noise made by the EL wire inverter. This was replaced later when I hacked the inverter.
Glamour shot. As I had hoped, the PC is extremely quiet. On a normal day in our livingroom a person has to put their head next to the case to hear anything at all out of it. At 5 AM on a quiet Sunday morning with the refrigerator unplugged a person can hear the PSU fan and some hard drive whine from about two feet away. So far it seems to run cool enough, although I haven't done any real testing besides opening the thing up and feeling the temperature inside. There's definitely nothing in there getting past warm. A few last things I might do to it later is add another hard drive and maybe put an 80 mm fan into the bottom for "push".
Finally, here is the box in its natural environment. I bought the fabric for the side panels because it had a great vintage feel, and it wasn't until I got it home that I realized it was nearly the same color as my reading chair. Lucky coincidence.
That's it. Thanks for stopping by.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Quick Links
Mailing Lists:
Mini-ITX Store
Projects:
Show Random
Accordion-ITX
Aircraft Carrier
Ambulator 1
AMD Case
Ammo Box
Ammo Tux
AmmoLAN
amPC
Animal SNES
Atari 800 ITX
Attache Server
Aunt Hagar's Mini-ITX
Bantam PC
BBC ITX B
Bender PC
Biscuit Tin PC
Blue Plate
BlueBox
BMW PC
Borg Appliance
Briefcase PC
Bubbacomp
C1541 Disk Drive
C64 @ 933MHz
CardboardCube
CAUV 2008
CBM ITX-64
Coelacanth-PC
Cool Cube
Deco Box
Devilcat
DOS Head Unit
Dreamcast PC
E.T.PC
Eden VAX
EdenStation IPX
Encyclomedia
Falcon-ITX
Florian
Frame
FS-RouterSwitch
G4 Cube PC
GasCan PC
Gingerbread
Gramaphone-ITX-HD
GTA-PC
Guitar PC
Guitar Workstation
Gumball PC
Hirschmann
HTPC
HTPC2
Humidor 64
Humidor CL
Humidor II
Humidor M
Humidor PC
Humidor V
I.C.E. Unit
i64XBOX
i-EPIA
iGrill
ITX Helmet
ITX TV
ITX-Laptop
Jeannie
Jukebox ITX
KiSA 444
K'nex ITX
Leela PC
Lego 0933 PC
Legobox
Log Cabin PC
Lunchbox PC
Mac-ITX
Manga Doll
Mantle Radio
Mediabox
Mega-ITX
Micro TV
Mini Falcon
Mini Mesh Box
Mini-Cluster
Mobile-BlackBox
Moo Cow Moo
Mr OMNI
NAS4Free
NESPC
OpenELEC
Osh Kosh
Pet ITX
Pictureframe PC
Playstation 2 PC
Playstation PC
Project NFF
PSU PC
Quiet Cubid
R2D2PC
Racing The Light
RadioSphere
Restomod TV
Robotica 2003
Rundfunker
SaturnPC
S-CUBE
SEGA-ITX
SpaceCase
SpacePanel
Spartan Bluebird
Spider Case
Supra-Server
Teddybear
Telefunken 2003
TERA-ITX
The Clock
ToAsTOr
Tortoise Beetle
Tux Server
Underwood No.5
Waffle Iron PC
Windows XP Box
Wraith SE/30
XBMC-ION