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I used 5/8"
pine laminate which is essentially strips of pine glued
and pressed together to form a stripe effect. Thicker slabs
of this stuff are found in chopping block tables and counter
tops. It makes for a good looking case, and is relatively
easy to work with and not all that expensive (about $15
for a 24" x 48" piece). The only problem with
the laminate is that it tends to crack along its seams while
drilling fan holes, so you must be careful about that. I
finished off the look with some cherry-tinted stain.
I was trying
to keep the look as clean and as cooling efficient as possible.
I used two 120mm fans for intake down low in the front,
and another 120mm fan and fans on the Enermax as outflow
fans, creating a slight overpressure in the case, keeping
dust from getting sucked into cracks and devices.
A close up shot
of the fan grilles. The green metal inside the case is actually
the light from the green cold cathode reflecting off of
the metal hard drive tray inside. The flash reduced the
light quite a bit.
Another picture
with the lights out, showing the green neon:
Various detail
pics of the dual hard drive configuration and and the interior
wiring. What you can't see in the hard drive picture is
the two layers of vibration damping rubber matting I mounted
under the drive tray to alleviate some of the drive noise
caused by the drive platters spinning at 10,000 rpm.
I use five switches:
one 12v-5v switch for the 92mm Zalman fan, one 12v-Off-5v
for the dual 120mm fans up front, one 12v-Off-5v for the
120mm in the back and two momentary On-(On) switches for
Reset and Power. The black switch is the On-Off switch for
the Cold Cathode light.
The Four LEDs
are for (from left to right) Power, IDE Activity, SCSI HD0
Activity and SCSI HD1 Activity.
For a quiet ride,
go
Zalman:
Here's a picture
of how it looks now. Note the boring beige HX08 that currently
hosts Headcrash. It's days are
numbered!
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