hey sauve, how are things?
hey sauve, how are things? The beast still going strong? So how’s the dust situation, Is the case still fairly dust free these days? j/w
@ RJFLASH I wanted to
@ RJFLASH
I wanted to mention 2 things:
The 780i board is notorious for its MCP temps. I had concidered water cooling, but it would have been the only part water cooled. Plus nVidia and eVGA seem to think that the temps will cause no harm, so I opted against it.
Also, water cooling the E8400 is a waste of money. The slender build of the chip puts it in an odd position: you can’t overheat it unless you severely overvolt it. So watercooling this chip is like signing its death warrant. The heat will never damage it before the voltage will.
The MCP on the 780i runs hot
The MCP on the 780i runs hot from the factory, though its still well within limits. Hell, the 88-90 C I am getting now is a lot cooler than what it was before I changed the airflow pattern in the case.
It was running at about 105C. hehe
Cool, thanks for the advice.
Cool, thanks for the advice. E8400 will go on my list. I never used that processor yet. Most processors get pretty hot even when air cooled at stock clocks….... NB at 90C! (=194 fahrenheit!) thats hot! Liquid cooling can drop it down to around 118F at around 72F ambient; not just a longer life, but more efficiency and performance.
Sauvage
"UGR-1" (Ultimate Gaming Rig v.1.1)
Category
Case Mods
Status
Ready for Battle
Deets
The basis of this mod is from the enjoyment I got as a child going to the arcade to play the racing/flying games. Climbing into the seat was like climbing into another world, surrounded in all its gaming glory.
UGR-1 is stage one, and the most basic, of a trilogy of mods I plan to build.
You can view the slide show at http://www.flickr.com/photos/chatsauvage/sets/72157601297497058/show/ or go through them one by one at http://www.flickr.com/photos/chatsauvage/sets/72157601297497058/
and now you can look under the hood as well. To see the initial computer build, and its scores you can go here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chatsauvage/sets/72157605655225544/
This mod started almost 2 years ago on paper, and is a largely toned down version of the original design. Since it is the first of this design I have built, it is labeled version 1.
***** Not shown is a small upgrade to the mod, taking it from version 1 to 1.1. I added a full cushion heater massager to the seat.******
The goal was to build everything a hardcore gamer would need into a single unit. It had to look good. It had to have some functional eye candy. It also had to keep the blasted dust out of my PC! I thought it was bad with my Dell, but after finally getting around to building my first gaming rig from the ground up, and using the Antec 900 case (aka: wind tunnel) I couldn’t take the dust anymore.
The pictures will tell you most of what you need to know, but the list of all the goodies is as follows:
- Modified (disassembled is a better term) Antec 900 case.
– eVGA nVidia 780i motherboard
– E8400 OC’ed to 4.36GHz
– 2x SLI eVGA nVidia 8800GTX OC’ed to 621 Core / 1566 Shader / 1008 Memory
– 2× 2GB Corsair XMS2 DDR2-800 OC’ed to 1GHz @ 2.0v 5-4-4-10
– 2x Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 500GB 32MB
– ABS Tagan BZ900
– Samsung DVD (CD/DL/LS) Burner
– Tuniq 120 Tower
- Dell 22” Ultra Sharp WS
– Logitech G5 Gaming Mouse
– Logitech G25 Racing Wheel/Pedals/Shifter
– Saitek x52 Flight Control System
– Wolf King Warrior Gaming Keypad
– Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000
– Creative Inspiron 5500 5.1 Surround System
– Plantronics GameCom1 Pro Headset
– Woods Premier Surge Protector
On top of all that, there is some wood, some nails, some screws, some speaker box carpet, a little bit of insulation, and a bucket seat out of a 93 TransAm. Oh, and a cool looking skulls and barbed wire seat cover!
The mod also has a specialty truck box “paddle” latch, a door, a hidden compartment, a nice sized storage box, a custom power/LED panel, hidden and easily accessible USB/Firewire/Mic&Headphone jacks, and extra power outlets.
The mod boasts 12 fans total. An 80mm fan custom mounted to keep the board for the speakers cool. Three 120mm Antec blue LED fans draw air into the computer case through a filtered 16×16 register vent at the front of the rig. In the cockpit I used plexi and a mirror to allow you to see the intake fans from the interior of the cockpit.
Another 120mm fan sets on the other side of the top (technically speaking it’s the right, now) drive bay helping to force the air across the memory and directly into the Tuniq 120 tower which uses its 120mm fan to cool the chip and send the air on to the 120mm exhaust fan. This setup, which is just a tweaked version of the original Antec case design, has optimized airflow in the case, and keeps things very cool.
The GPU’s, PSU, and north bridge all sporting their own stock fans, and the 12th fan is the 200mm “Big Boy” that was removed from the top of the Antec case. It is now keeping the media drive, monitor, and racing wheel cool, mounted atop the dash box.
The entire mod is finished with black and Navy blue speaker box carpet (commonly called trunk carpet). All the speakers are custom mounted (removed from their original casings completely) with the subwoofer directly below the seat. The dell monitor speaker was re-wired to be used as the center speaker in the Creative setup. The circuit board that was removed from the sub box has been mounted under the mouse pad to make it easy to plug into, and easy to get to the sub DB gain knob. There is a small intake port just under the mousepad, and an exhaust port with fan at the bottom side of speaker circuit board which is cooling the speaker circuits. I would have rather took cool air from low, and ported hot air out higher up, but I couldn’t make it work in this design without blowing the hot air onto the person in the seat. I prefer to stay cool when gaming!
The monitor stand was disassembled to remove the plastic feet covers and expose the aluminum feet below. This was to both make the monitor feet exactly 1/2” (to flush mount into the dash, allowing to carpet over without any bulging) and to keep from ruining the stand. Every component in this mod, including the Antec case, has not been permanently damaged in any way, and can be removed from the mod and put back together as it was from the factory.
The floor, armrests, and the exposed raised floor in front of the seat (when the seat is fully back) is all padded. The raised seat section is separate from the computer/dash section to make for easy moving, and to fit through doorways. The door latch pulls upward, lifting the entire armrest up to allow for door swing.
Flipping the door armrest fully open reveals a hidden compartment in the door that houses both the keyboard and gaming headset. The fixed armrest on the right is for storage. The monitor swivels to the left to allow access to the hidden ports as well as the extra power outlets.
It was made for gaming, and the computer itself can handle anything you throw at it. It scored over 28k marks in 3Dmark05, 20k marks in 3Dmark06, and over 11k marks in PCmark. It chewed up Crysis at Ultra High settings 4xAA, 16xAF, 1680×1050 and spit it out asking for something harder.
It took me about 3 weeks to build it, getting sidetracked on other projects and running out of material, but now that its done I want to start another one. I had no intention of showing it off like this, but after posting in the forums on ExtremeTech for the guys who helped me on the initial computer build, I noticed that ET had put my post in their readers spotlight on the main page. After some pressure from my friends at the ET forums, I figured I might as well give this contest a try.
-Sauv
-
Pimpin
compcams78
Status:
Ready for Battle -
JunkyardSLI
TwistedDog
Status:
Ready for Battle -
Project: [Thessa]
knet370
Status:
Ready for Battle -
"Building Better Worlds"
E.E.L. Ambiense
Status:
Ready for Battle -
Little Dragon
TheMightyT
Status:
Under Construction














Ah I see the Saitek X52 Pro
Ah I see the Saitek X52 Pro Flight Control System stuck in there my friend, I am a true FSX (Microsoft Flight Simulator 10) fan and I have had the mouse hovering over the order button for a few weeks, also the Saitek Pro Flight Yoke System. Could you please give a short review? for this I would be very greatful.