- Joined
- Dec 7, 2003
A tour of my Lubic based system--many pics
(Please refrain from posting replies until I am done
Hi all,
I’m putting the finishing touches on my Aerocool Lubic Frame based system, so I thought I’d give y’all a little tour.
Let me explain how this whole system came about. Some 12 months back, I, with many other folks, engaged in the pursuit of achieving a stable air-cooled 4ghz overclock with a 3.2 Prescott P4 core (see the fairly legendary 4ghz threads). Here is a basic list of mods that I employed to achieve this goal on my Abit IC7Max3: max cpu cooling (XP120 + high volume delta 120mm), dedicated mosfet cooling beyond the Abit OTES, additional backside capacitors, Vcore droopmod, VRAM/VTT modification. At the time, I was working mainly with my components sitting on books on my desk. I thought to myself, wouldn’t it be nice to have something like a tech bench, upon which my components could be mounted with some security. I decided, tho, that I wanted to taylor it specifically to my needs, so that it must have excellent air flow, very high standoffs to accommodate my motherboard-backside mods, and that it would sit in front of my on my desk, so that I could allow access to my potentiometer-driven voltmods.
I made some other conscious decisions before setting out on this adventure:
I also decided upfront that I didn’t want some sort of custom one-off C&C machined structure. I’ve never taken shop or woodworking. My tools would be limited to what I know I can use: handsaw, jigsaw, and dremel.
It should also probably be obvious: this creation was to be about performance. I wasn’t setting out to make a foam/bondo crafted sculpture to honor a popular movie. The aesthetics were to be driven by performance, or at least certainly not hinder it.
So I sat down with some pencil and paper, and I tried to clear my mind of preconceived notions about case design, and I tried to formulate what every air-cooled overclocker mulls over: what is the best air flow?
This was what I came up with, a simple chimney.
It followed quickly, that perhaps I should isolate the components that most needed this crazy airflow, and so I conceived of 2 towers. One with this huge airflow that would contain just the motherboard. Then a second tower to house the powersupplies and drive racks.
After some thought tho, it’s obvious that one very big component is going to interrupt this flow: the video card. The same basic flow will happen in front of the video card and behind the motherboard, but a large portion of airflow will slam right into the video card.
So I revised the design so that a portion of flow will feed the video card, then exhaust left. A new fresh inflow above the video card will be provided with a duct:
So I cast about how to physically construct these towers. I toyed with the idea of using MDS or wood, or even Legos. Then I saw an episode of The Screen Savers back on the TechTV days, where the mad modder Yoshi had thrown together a case constructed of parts from something called an Aerocool Lubic set. And suddenly, I knew it could be done!
Well, the order went in, and my Lubic components arrived.
And the next day I put together a prototype tower.
And when I leaned that tower over and looked up that chimney, I was like effin A, that’s what I call airflow. Forget about S shaped airflow crammed into stupid ATX towers.
(Please refrain from posting replies until I am done
Hi all,
I’m putting the finishing touches on my Aerocool Lubic Frame based system, so I thought I’d give y’all a little tour.
Let me explain how this whole system came about. Some 12 months back, I, with many other folks, engaged in the pursuit of achieving a stable air-cooled 4ghz overclock with a 3.2 Prescott P4 core (see the fairly legendary 4ghz threads). Here is a basic list of mods that I employed to achieve this goal on my Abit IC7Max3: max cpu cooling (XP120 + high volume delta 120mm), dedicated mosfet cooling beyond the Abit OTES, additional backside capacitors, Vcore droopmod, VRAM/VTT modification. At the time, I was working mainly with my components sitting on books on my desk. I thought to myself, wouldn’t it be nice to have something like a tech bench, upon which my components could be mounted with some security. I decided, tho, that I wanted to taylor it specifically to my needs, so that it must have excellent air flow, very high standoffs to accommodate my motherboard-backside mods, and that it would sit in front of my on my desk, so that I could allow access to my potentiometer-driven voltmods.
I made some other conscious decisions before setting out on this adventure:
I also decided upfront that I didn’t want some sort of custom one-off C&C machined structure. I’ve never taken shop or woodworking. My tools would be limited to what I know I can use: handsaw, jigsaw, and dremel.
It should also probably be obvious: this creation was to be about performance. I wasn’t setting out to make a foam/bondo crafted sculpture to honor a popular movie. The aesthetics were to be driven by performance, or at least certainly not hinder it.
So I sat down with some pencil and paper, and I tried to clear my mind of preconceived notions about case design, and I tried to formulate what every air-cooled overclocker mulls over: what is the best air flow?
This was what I came up with, a simple chimney.
It followed quickly, that perhaps I should isolate the components that most needed this crazy airflow, and so I conceived of 2 towers. One with this huge airflow that would contain just the motherboard. Then a second tower to house the powersupplies and drive racks.
After some thought tho, it’s obvious that one very big component is going to interrupt this flow: the video card. The same basic flow will happen in front of the video card and behind the motherboard, but a large portion of airflow will slam right into the video card.
So I revised the design so that a portion of flow will feed the video card, then exhaust left. A new fresh inflow above the video card will be provided with a duct:
So I cast about how to physically construct these towers. I toyed with the idea of using MDS or wood, or even Legos. Then I saw an episode of The Screen Savers back on the TechTV days, where the mad modder Yoshi had thrown together a case constructed of parts from something called an Aerocool Lubic set. And suddenly, I knew it could be done!
Well, the order went in, and my Lubic components arrived.
And the next day I put together a prototype tower.
And when I leaned that tower over and looked up that chimney, I was like effin A, that’s what I call airflow. Forget about S shaped airflow crammed into stupid ATX towers.
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