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<channel>
  <title>Modshop - Newest Comments and Worklogs</title>
  <link>http://modshop.net/worklogs_comments/rss</link>
  <description>Just the deets on what's going on and who's been talking</description>
  <language>en-us</language>
  <pubDate>September 5, 2008, 4:46 pm</pubDate>
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[dam that is good work, but the proseser looked like it doesn't matchup, but then again i don't have any mattereal to do this stuff of how to. my guy would loose agenst any of you guys. can we be friend on modshop ]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-06-24</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[this is a very nice build.  i need to consider something like this for my parent's house.  my mom likes how i have a pc hooked up to my LCD and asked if i could build her one.  the only problem is that she doesn't want an ugly tower just sitting in her living room.
very inspiring. nice work!]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-03-27</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[That was a hard fought battle! Good job! 
*pant* *pant*
]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-03-22</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[GreenSabbath - I think your work is awesome - superbly crafted, beautifully executed and along with Datamancer inspired me to first put dremmel to wood.

I wasn't sure about wood after reading some of the drivel on threads like:

http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/10/01/151209

but further investigation found heaps of mods based on huge amounts of foam, perspex and other combustables.

I am actually a chemical engineer by training (perhaps odder than being a PC modding geek but thats another debate) so I just had to try it out... set fire to stuff and find out!!

However you are 100% right... if you can generate the same sustained flame as a bic / zippo / ronson lighter inside your PC then really "Houston you have a problem"...your house is actually burning down.

I guess inside the Treasure Chest (may more people vote for it or at least bid on ebay) I was more worried about Lacquers, Varnish and Glues of unknown origin being exposed to an Invidia GPU at full tilt. Probably won't go on fire even without the fire retardant material but it may start to smell a little funky when you get to the train in 'Gears of War' for example. I was just as interested in glues which tolerate high heat as I was in the GPU / CPU components.

Bottom line though is - if you keep the PSU safe / isolated / insulated, then you really need to screw up to get smoke and fire from the rest. Sadly I did just that by plugging 24v into 12v and generated quite a bit of smoke, several voided warrenties and a lot of personal expense but no fire.

I want to line the inside of my next mod with denim, or plaid / tartan wool (think Braveheart) , or something like that. Think these will be benign or at least less combustable than foam.

Regards

Bruce]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-14</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[As far as selling cases go, I think its perfectly legit and i think the builder should definitely keep the winnings, it only makes sense.  Also as far as voting on cases which may or may not exist as they were when the pictures were taken, if you think about it, we're really only voting on pictures of the case anyway since we can't actually see the real thing.  Sangaku has changed many times (new interior cases, new hardware) but hey, they are mods and they're meant to change (the photos are of the original version).  

As an aside, who was it exactly that warned you of wood cases and fire?  Unless they were under 10, they should be taken behind the chemical shed because if your wood case is catching on fire, you have bigger problems on your hands... like your house is burning down.]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-14</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[I've thought of selling my Portal case but I am afraid that I would get sued since the logos look so similar to the ones in the game but they were made from scratch in illustrator. I just dont want to chance that.

I think you did a great job with the mod by the way... not exactly my style but I appreciate the detail that went into it.]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-13</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[@mlwilkins - yes, but there's a difference between work done for commission or under contract (in which case part of the contract is that you relinquish your rights to it), and work done for its own sake and then sold. ]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-13</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[From what I have seen on Ebay you more than likely will not get 1400 for it.  I once tried selling a "good body" running 68 Tbird and i couldn't get half of that. the biggest problem is the "reserve not met yet" tag on most things. Also when it has no reserve there are the vultures out there that will try to bid on the item at the last minute. 

Nathan, it may be silly, but say you work for an advertising agency and have signed a contract in which states that all work created while employed by them becomes their property.   You  enter a case designed for a customer's trade show, it's your case design but someone owns all rights to it.  (All rights as in displaying, where and how and when ect...)



]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-13</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[*LOL* The e-bay experiment closed last night with 700+ site visits and 7 watchers ...and errrr ... zero bids!!!

I did get a couple of emails "Even though I cannot afford to bid on this, I wanted to let you know that I think it's AWESOME! Coolest idea I have seen" and "It's a little out of my price range, but you sir are a frigging genius!!! Hats off to you, that is awesome...." - so some pride restored.

Great debate though.

The treasure chest is still safely in my possession. I've put it back up for auction but am proposing to remove the solid state drive, replace the 1Tb drive with a 250GB hard drive i have in my current rig and replace the blu ray / hd with a standard DVD drive - reducing the cost by $1000.

This will ;-) sadly leave me with some cool parts I'll just have to upgrade my permanent system with! "Honest there is nothing I can do I'll just have to upgrade" ...

Now that opens another angle in the debate below (@Nathan)... does that mean *if* it did sell as a rig internally but not externally different from the write up that the voting and competition is about the rig *as it was* or as it is today. This is like the old philosophy question that if picasso drew a brilliant picture with a stick in the sand at low tide that only lasts for a few hours - is it still valid?

If you took lots of pictures, made a YouTube video of how he did it and posted a worklog - then I think yes. Ref - installation art, painting Mont Blanc pink etc.

One thing for sure ...wish I'd clicked 'buy now' on the modshop sponsor newegg offer of the 900 + vista + 2GB + psu when I had the chance because I now have some killer drives which would work well in a new but low cost system.

So - back on ebay for the low low price of $1400 - tell your friends.

More thoughts?]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-12</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[I have sold every single one of my rigs with the exception of the one I am using now, my nephews and mother's. lol In fact I just recently sold Tinkerbell. :) LOL, I don't even know how many that is. 

And I agree, modding is expensive and if you can sell one to pay for the next one, then that is a bonus. :) ]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-12</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest website]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/2564/worklog/treasure-chest-website]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[ Full details at http://www.geocities.com/bruce_d_webb/]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-01</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest worklog]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/2562/worklog/treasure-chest-worklog]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[This is my first serious mod. Up until now the most adventurous I've been is to install a Zalman CPU cooler instead of the OEM unit which came with a new chip! I also had never owned a Dremel before so a lot of learning is involved in this summary. I've built a number of PCs in standard cases, most often made by Antec - I like the 900 for example. I like Asus and Intel motherboards and prefer Intel and NVidia over AMD and ATI – not really due to any strong technical reasoning, just had a mixture of good and bad installation experiences over the years However these machines have always lived firmly in, next to or under a desk. I've never really been convinced about merging TV and PC, however a number of things seem to be helping this convergence. Flat screen TVs are coming down in price and TiVo type technology is making recording and fast forwarding etc a real breeze. Hi speed internet, movies, shows, music, games which download on demand add to the mix.


I believe one sacrifice making HD screens cheaper and cheaper is sound quality, so the whole system needs more horsepower for richer sounds. I think in the coming months wireless speakers are going to be ‘hot’ (cheaper and better quality), this would make setting up surround sound for movies and games easier. Add the need for more horsepower to play media (HD, Blu Ray etc), the improvements in wireless technology for keyboards, mouse and ‘wii’ type controllers then the argument for PC in the living room starts to make more sense.


But in some people’s minds they are ugly: http://uk.gizmodo.com/2007/08/15/art_deco_pc_swaps_metal_for_wo.html


And others are looking for something that will age gracefully with time, like a pair of jeans or leather jacket: http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/07/18/can_we_design_gadgets_that_age.html


And others point to the amount of noise a standard pc rig makes if not properly managed: http://www.silentpcreview.com/


So… I wanted to build a PC which was quiet, could be disguised as a piece of furniture in the living room, could store loads of movies, and could play Crysis.  Here is where I wanted to put this PC:


 


I already have a Wii, a cable box and a DVD player. The PC could replace the DVD player so that all I’d have in view would be the cable box, the Wii and the phone. The first task was to find something to hide the PC in. I could have used the big wooden chest that is there already but that would have made for a pretty short hobby


…put a PC inside box, run cables, switch on.


No, that box I have pegged for a future project to house a fiber optic SPDIF sound receiver and sub woofer but I’m waiting for wireless speaker technology to evolve a little first.  So a quick browse through some local antique stores and $75 later, yielded ‘box number 1’











A lot of sanding, filling and polishing later I had a nice box but those really thick walls were going to cause problems.


I wanted to use the Asus P5K-E/WIFI-AP motherboard – built in WiFi and SPDIF output would reduce the need for any expansion cards, other than the graphics card. Bottom line I wasn’t looking forward to trying to cut so much hardwood, I also didn’t think I’d have enough depth to fit the Ninja CPU cooler and still close the lid.


Yup – I should have bought the hardware first and then taken a tape measure to the antique store but at least I got to practice some workshop skills as a test run!


Next step was a trip to Hobby Lobby for something completely unrelated and in the January furniture sale selection there was an interesting selection of boxes, chests and cases.





I suspect these are made ‘en masse’ in China and of course are ‘faux’ to make them look antique but the wood is solid but not too thick and the one I chose had just about the dimensions I was looking for.


$72 later and I now had a plan for a quiet high end Media PC hidden in a wood and leather ‘Treasure Chest’!


My plan was to buy a standard PC case and then cut this up for pieces to be fitted into the letterbox layout of the box. I chose the Antex Solo since it has a lot of 'quiet' pc options I was looking for.


Following some measurements and playing around with various options I landed on putting the motherboard on the left had side and the power supply on the right. This meant the rear exhaust fan would be in the middle of the back wall. I wanted to use a full size graphics card and so didn’t want any additional cards in the expansion slots. I like the Antec ‘bungee’ system for quiet hard drive mounting, so used this for the big slow drive. The 2½” Solid State 16GB drive doesn’t generate much heat and no vibration so can be ‘stuffed’ just about anywhere. Given that the chest has quite a deep lid I had to put some parts in ‘roof space’. I chose to put the power switch, reset switch, USB, firewire etc combination (which would normally be on the front or top of a pc) up here but on the side. I also put the optical drive up here.


Now ‘silent’ pc purists would quite rightly not have any fans in the system, however I am willing to go ‘quiet’ rather than ‘silent’. Given that most of the budget has been spent on the solid state drive, graphics card, chip etc I didn’t want to stretch to water cooling etc. My strategy is to only use 120mm fans since they are quieter than 80mm or 92mm fans. Therefore the OEM fan for the Intel chip had to go and so did the fan on the graphics card. The idea being that I can use Q-Fan or similar to ramp fans up or down as required.


Here is the final layout of the base of the box:





And my intended air flow scheme:


 



I came up with a couple of ground rules for the design…


Don’t touch the front or top of the box. From the front and top it must look exactly like the original piece of furniture. No LEDs, no drive bays, no power switches etc.Sides of the box can have drive bays, fans, switch etc but these must be neat and unobtrusive so they would pass a quick glanceThe back of the box can be as metallic / cable-laden / traditional pc as required.


*Performance*


Second or close to ‘best’ and then turn down the heat. For example: On the graphics card - single NVidia 8800 GTS instead of 8800 GTX, ($400 instead of $600) and don’t anticipate SLI but will retain the option for the future. Will look into ‘under clocking’ this to save on heat and power while still getting Direct-X 10 etc. On memory going with DDR2 rather than DDR3. On the CPU – Duo rather than Quad core. Hope to also look into ‘under volting’ this to reduce heat when just playing movies etc.


I bought an MTron 16GB solid state SATA drive. Couldn’t stretch to the 32GB.Instead of a single big / fast / quiet hard drive go for a small solid state ‘c:’ drive and then a big / slow / quiet second drive. This will allow Windows to be installed on a totally silent, low power, ultra fast drive but only leaves about 10GB of usable space – good for a game or two. The rest of the storage for movies etc will be a conventional but ‘very quiet’ 1TB hard drive. Also have a 16GB USB drive which I will be testing in this system.


I am not sure who is going to win the format battles for DVDs so bought an LG player which can show Blu Ray and HD. Challenge will be to make it quiet.


*Cooling*


Only use 120 mm Scythe quiet fans on as low a speed as possible. Interesting challenge will be the ‘no front or top’ rule. Two side intakes and one rear outlet (plus the PSU fan). This should be quieter than traditional 80 or 92mm case fans. Design is to install BIG heat sinks on the CPU and GPU and look to avoid additional fans, or if needed repeat with more 120 mm Scythe quiet fans on low speed and certainly not the OEM fans.


*Safety*


There are a number of websites on wooden cases and modding with wood and many have a comment ‘wood burns dummy’ or some such somewhere. Many quiet PC designs I’ve looked at use a lot of foam and plastic which also burn quiet well and the closest I’ve come to a PC fire is smoked motherboard from putting the 24v connection into the 12v socket (something you do once only) – however I wanted to address this concern and who knows an exploding capacitor or a short or something could cause a flame. My solution was to cut up an industrial work shirt made of Nomex ® fire retardant material. I glued some test strips of foam, felt and Nomex ® to a scrap piece of the wood and then put a lighter underneath for several minutes. The felt went gooey and smelly, the foam burned nicely and the Nomex ® just changed from blue to red / yellow despite prolonged exposure to the flame. The shirt will provide enough material to line the inside of the box so that I won’t be as concerned about building an expensive barbeque.


Safety First – testing the fire retardant material:






*Construction progress*


Day1. Work bench, ‘pirate’s chest’ and dremmel ready: 





Cutting up the Antec Solo case for parts. I really like the ‘bungee’ support for the hard drives:


 



Removing the base and back plate for mounting the motherboard. Some jigsaw work required:


 



Cutting out back of box for back plate and PSU. Lined the base with 3mm foam:


 



Checked motherboard and PSU fitting:






 




The rear fan cover is still in one piece. This made closing the lid a little fiddly so needed a better solution. Later on I cut this in half and fitted the top part to the lig of the box.


Protected external wood with painters masking tape and then cut holes for 120mm fans. Quite a bit of structural wood has been cut away so will need to compensate for this later in the build:


 



Lined the inside with recycled fire retardant material (nomex) from a work shirt. Cut half of rear fan vent with jigsaw and covered exposed metal with ‘lego’ pneumatic hose. Had to cut quite a bit of the wood to ensure access to expansion slot cover screws. 


 




 



Rear view in progress.



Installed 120mm fans and then braced top of box with metal tubing. Allowed use of the Antec bungee system as a mounting for the hard drive. Metal tubing braces across the box to compensate for the tension in the elastic. Also when combined with cable clips makes a neat fixing for the bungee. Will cut the back tube to make space for the rear fan.


 



Had to extend the fan cables in order to reach the motherboard. Note the additional brace on rear.


 


Oops - installed the fans the wrong way round! The label should be facing into the case as this is the direction air will move – I didn’t catch this until much later.


Lid of box upside down. Mounting system for optical drive. Recycled drive bay covers from an Antec 900 case. Rubber grommets recycled from the Antec case to minimize noise.


 


Positioning the drive bay. Note this is an old CD Rom drive rather than the LG - I was using this old unit for sizing purposes only, didn't want to risk scratching or dropping the new unit.


 

I went as far as installing this but it still allowed for too much disc vibration to reach the lid and so was too noisy. Ended up encasing the optical drive in a foam box recycled from the power supply packaging and then covering this in nomex, to be suspended onto a metal cross beam.


------ 


Back to the motherboard...


 



Mounting the Ninja! I originally put the supplied Scythe fan on the right had side but later replaced this with a Scythe S-Flex on the front. The S-Flex seemed just a little smoother.


*Graphics card*


 



This is the GTS-8800 stripped of heat sink and fan. This was one the scariest parts of the whole project – taking an unused $400 graphics card to pieces. One tip – wipe the heat paste off carefully as it is smeared everywhere and will cause the fins which are about to be installed to fall off!


Heat sinks installed in fairly obvious places:


 


Thermalright big heat sink installed.


 

Read up on this since it is not obvious – one way round and it seems not to fit and be badly designed with only a few screw threads available …but rotate the plate by ninety degrees and it fits perfectly with plenty of threads to spare. I chose to mount the plates so that they are on the back of the card, this was so I would end up with more expansion bay space in the final set up – maybe even space to go SLI (two graphics cards) but I rethought this later on once I’d worked out the airflows inside the finished case.


-------


*Fan Filters* 


With all those heat sinks inside the case I didn’t want to put a simple grill over the side fans - dust, dog hair etc will soon build up inside the case. At first I tried air conditioning filter material but it was ugly, made a mess with bits of fiber sticking up and seemed block a lot of airflow. I found this cut to shape activated carbon pre-filter material in a hardware store. Hopefully it will catch dust without limiting too much air. I’ve put in one 120mm fan on either side of the box as intakes but with filters and only one 120mm fan on the back as exhaust with no filter. The intent being that two fans plus filters equals one fan without filter. Of course there is also the power supply fan and leaks in / out from the box so overall should be in good shape.


 


Here you can see the lid back and the cables neatened up. The 1 terabyte hard drive is in its bungees and then Velcro strapped in place:


 


A later picture showing the “FR” label which stands for Fire Resistant:


 


The 16gb solid state drive is also in – back right of the case next to the fan.


Note also the S-Flex flan on the Ninja heatsink is now at the front. This makes for airflow straight through to the case exhaust fan. Of course in ultra quiet, or underclocked, mode I’d hope to not need the CPU fan at all. Still it is there as an option.


This is when I really started to think about graphics card airflow. Yes there is lots of space for more expansion cards between the card and the left hand side fan – but what about hard core gaming? I could add a 92mm fan to the heat sink since it is designed to take one  but my plan is to have only the quietest 120mm fans in this system. 


I then stared taking a close look at the exposed metal around the bracket mount.


 


Those are 4 screw caps with have M2 threads all the way through …and the original BFG heatsink came with M2 screws with fancy springs attached …and well one thing led to another and after a lot of cutting with the dremel I found a way of mounting the heat sink back onto the front of the board while keeping the Thermalright perfectly in place. One sacrifice – I needed to drill down through some of the old fins to put the third screw in place…


 



Shows where I had to drill down through the plates to get a third M2 machine screw through to the Thermalright screw caps. Ugly but I’ll tidy it up a little and cover it with a heat sink.


 


Monster! Two heat sinks for the price of …well two….


This made me happier – I can cover up some of the expansion slots while I don’t need them but I can use the left hand case fan to direct some air dedicated to the graphics card and I don’t need a small noisy fan. There is the small copper stick on heat sink to cover the ‘bullet hole’!


 


Air in from the left, through the fins and out of the back. Additional cooling from the huge heat sink on the CPU side of the case.


This is the finished PC. As per plan nothing visible from the top or front.


 


The right side shows only the optical drive and fan cover.


 


The left side also has a fan cover and then power, reset, mic and ear jacks, USB and firewire – cut directly from the front of the Solo case.:


 


The back looks more like a traditional PC, but that is okay since this shouldn’t be seen too much:


 


Here it is a test set-up. The PC is the box in the bottom right shelf and that is Windows Vista running up on the TV screen.


 



It is connected to the internet through wireless. It plays HD and Blu-Ray. It has 1 tb of hard disk space and 16 gb of solid state drive which is FAST and silent. 


 




 



 



 



*Software*


Initially Vista wanted more than 16GB and would not install onto the MTron which would have defeated the purpose. Normally it would take about 16.5GB during install and end up collapsing to about 8GB.


On a separate PC I used V-Lite to compress a new copy of Vista Home Premium down to less than 16GB so that it would accept the MTron during install. I didn’t drop too many features before it would work. Had to burn the ISO image on DVD-R since they won’t fit on CD-R (too big) and for whatever reason I struggled with my ‘thumb’ drive.


After installing Vista on the Chest PC I was going to reduce the Swap file to something really small but opted instead to have Windows running on the ultra fast C: drive but look for the Swap file on the big but slower D: drive (the 1TB western digital). Since I put 4GB of RAM in I’m thinking Windows shouldn’t need to use this function too much. Anyway it saved me more precious super fast C: drive space.


Window Vista home premium currently installed in 6GB leaving 10GB. Installed Crysis and started testing hard!


*Quiet performance so far*

I am really pleased with how quiet the system is. I am running Q-Fan which is the fan software which comes with the Asus board and by setting the system to 'quiet' in Windows and rebooting results in a pc which can't be heard over the background noise in the room. I haven't gone as far as underclocking the CPU or anything as dramatic as that yet. The idea being for a hard core gaming session the user simply flicks Q-Fan over to 'performance' and all the system fans kick in ready to remove the heat, and the noise won't be heard over the gaming action?
I did struggle with the optical drive in terms of audible noise. The extra foam has really helped and I am working on the idea that when a disc is playing a movie or music then this will make the issue of slight machine noise irrelevant.
A couple of other design issues around noise - there is 3mm of foam under the fire proofing on the bottom and sides of the case, there is minimal metal to metal contact, I used rubber or foam washers in a number of places including the screws fixing the motherboard support to the bottom of the box.



Breakdown of system and cost


   
ASUS P5K-E/WIFI-AP LGA 775 Intel P35 ATX Intel Motherboard
$139.99  

BFG GeForce 8800GTS 640MB 320-bit GDDR3 PCI Video Card
$399.99

CORSAIR CMPSU-520HX 520W Power Supply
$139.99

Intel E6850 Conroe 3.0GHz LGA 775 65W Dual-Core Processor
$279.99  

Patriot 4GB (2x2GB) DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) Desktop Memory
$99

Western Digital Caviar WD10EACS 1TB SATA 3.0Gb/s Hard Drive
$269.99

LG Blu-ray/HD DVD-ROM, ±R, Burner SATA Model GGC-H20L
$299.99

Scythe S-FLEX SFF21E 120mm Case Fan $14.99 x 3
$44.97

Scythe Ninja SCNJ-1100P 120mm Sleeve CPU Cooler
$39.99  

VGA COOL THERMALRIGHT HR-03 PLUS
$59.99

MTron MSD-6000 16GB Solid State Drive
$409

Pirate’s Chest. Wood / Leather. Hobby Lobby
$72

Antec Solo case
$100

Total $2,354.89 


----------


Bruce
 



]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-02-01</pubDate>
  </item>
  
  <item>
    <title><![CDATA[Treasure Chest]]></title>
    <link><![CDATA[http://modshop.net/users/bruce/rig/2343/worklog/treasure-chest]]></link>
    <description><![CDATA[*Treasure Chest*


Have updated the write up to include a bit more on the enhanced noise performance, thanks to some feedback from SilentPCReview.]]></description>
    <pubDate>2008-01-21</pubDate>
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