Modding Intro I: eVGA Classified SR-2 Case

Today we are featuring a recently completed project by Spotswood. He is outstanding with woodwork, which can be seen in various custom wood cases he has made for clients. The project featured here is a custom wood case created to house eVGA’s high-end dual-socket motherboard, the SR-2. Not only does it house the huge SR-2 motherboard, but it will also have a complete custom water cooling system contained within. This is truly one of the most beautiful cases I have ever seen, and it is my pleasure to present this masterpiece to the public.

The Idea and Design Concept

The quote below, describing the basics of this case, was taken from the full project log found in the forums. This case is an excellent example of the fantastic modding projects that are documented in the forums, and deserves highlighting as one of the best custom cases we’ve seen.

I’ve been commissioned to build a very large wooden case to house his upcoming watercooled EVGA Classified SR-2 rig. This case is designed and built to run cool, quiet and be ultra-flexible for future upgrades.

The walls will be constructed of 1.5-inch solid oak face frames with 5.2mm oak veneer plywood “panels” bolted to the inside of the frames and with aluminum “adapters” bolted to the front of the panels. The openings in the panels are sized to the largest pieces of hardware envisioned to be mounted in a particular location. The adapters could be exchanged with different adapters depending on what particular hardware is to be mounted in a panel opening.

Here are the specifications and some of the features of this case.

Physical Characteristics:

  • External dimensions (HxWxD – inches): 44 x 26.5 x 35.5

Materials:

  • 3/4-inch solid red oak, 3/4-inch and 5.2mm oak veneer plywood.
  • .100-inch aluminum sheet and 1/8-inch aluminum angle, channel and rectangular tube.
  • 1/8-inch clear acrylic.

Features:

  • The side doors act as air ducts to supply fresh air from the bottom, top and back of the case to the front/sides.
  • Unique modular panel construction provides flexibility for the placement of drive bays, fans, power supplies, etc.
  • Mounting locations for two power supplies.
  • Air flow is: fresh air enters from the side/front and exhausts out the back.
  • The bottom case has two custom radiator holders for mounting up to four 140×4 radiators.
  • The case is actually two separate cases bolted together.
  • Removable ten slot motherboard tray.
  • Motherboard tray can be mounted in a horizontal or vertical position.
  • Powder coated aluminum.
  • Wood finished with black water-based stain and polyurethane.

Spotswood

Construction

Here are just a few pics of Spotswood‘s superb woodworking, metalworking, staining, and painting skills!

Unfinished PSU Plate
Unfinished PSU Plate

Powder Coated PSU Plate
Powder Coated PSU Plate

Top Case Frame
Top Case Frame

Back of Top Case Panel
Back of Top Case Panel

Plates Mounted on Back of Top Case
Plates Mounted on Back of Top Case

Inside Top Case
Inside Top Case

Top Case Finished Paneling
Top Case Finished Paneling

Finished Bottom Case
Finished Bottom Case

Finished Project

The finished case absolutely blows me away every time I see it. Such great workmanship and attention to detail is unparalleled.

There’s no way I could include everything in this short introduction. So, don’t forget to check out the full project log for all of the detailed steps along the way. A big thanks goes out to Spotswood for gracing our forums with such amazing projects!

Matt T. Green

About Matthew Green 57 Articles
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Avatar of David
David

Forums Super Moderator

15,810 messages 11 likes

This is an absolutely stunning case!

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J
Just a nickname

Member

704 messages 0 likes

That thing is huuuuuuge! :shock:

The bottom space is for radiators?

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I.M.O.G.

Glorious Leader

25,037 messages 3 likes

Very impressive, in size AND workmanship. Thanks for sharing spotswood, and thanks Mattno5ss for pointing it out - I wouldn't have seen it otherwise. Pretty cool.

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jason4207

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Ben333

Folding for Team 32!

2,962 messages 1 likes

Today we are featuring a recently completed project by <a href="http://www.overclockers.com/forums/member.php?u=101872" target="_blank">Spotswood</a>. He is outstanding with woodwork, which can be seen in various custom wood cases he has made for clients. The project featured here is a custom wood case created to house eVGA's high-end dual-socket motherboard, the SR-2. Not only does it house the huge SR-2 motherboard, but it will also have a complete custom water cooling system contained within. This is truly one of the most beautiful cases I have ever seen, and it is my pleasure to present th... ... Return to article to continue reading.

Any way to make it so when the article gets posted to the forums (which I assume is automatic) it converts the HTML code to vBB?

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hokiealumnus

Water Cooled Moderator

16,561 messages 25 likes

Yea, sorry about that. There is probably a way but it requires dev time. We usually {cough} fix those by hand. It is now cleaned up.

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Avatar of David
David

Forums Super Moderator

15,810 messages 11 likes

This one was my fault: I'd been hitting publish before leaving the house in the morning and I was running late today. Sorry!

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Spotswood

Member

157 messages 0 likes

That thing is huuuuuuge! :shock:

The bottom space is for radiators?

Yes, four 140x4 rads along with pumps, an extra PSU or two and a slew of 140mm fans are to be stuffed into that compartment. :rock:

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Jmtyra

Member

3,059 messages 1 likes

Damn that's nice! :)

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Vovan

Member

545 messages 0 likes

Now thats the kind of posts and fanaticism I've seen on overclockers.com in 2001.
Really really impressive work!

However, I just have to leave a small but maybe valuable comment.
I noted your case was made of wood. Have you thought on EMR protection? Maybe some full sized metal grid inside the case, forming a cage and grounded to PSU will solve this problem. Two xeons, sr-2 and possibly several video cards will generate great amount of EMR, this may be very dangerous to your health.

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