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  3. What's the worst computer chassis hack you've done?

What's the worst computer chassis hack you've done?

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  • H honey the codewitch

    I've seen a computer run out of a pizza box (on the Internet anyway) - just the mobo and drive and stuff sitting in a greasy box. When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws. Soon I will be propping my PC up on 4 soup cans to give my 1000 watt PSU's fan some clearance to see if that solves my overheat problem when I use 4k rendering. Gotta wait for some adapters for my 2 remaining fans though before I try that. Life goals are the setup from the movie Pi.

    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

    E Offline
    E Offline
    ElectronProgrammer
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    Holding everything inside with cotton string :-D At the time I couldn't afford a mobile chassis for my work computer (literally a PC I take to work) so I asked in my school for any chassis that they had for recycling. They gave me an old one that was not ATX compatible so I put some rubber feet on the back of the motherboard to avoid shorts, strapped it to the chassis using cotton string, put a smaller heatsink on the CPU (the chassis was thin), strapped the fan to the heatsink with more cotton string, drilled holes in four old CDs to mount the four laptop HDDs (using screws) and strapped that set with some more cotton string to the chassis. Then, because this computer would suffer some vibrations from the travels, I strapped everything with even more cotton string forming a sort of web over the motherboard to prevent anything from moving. To finalize the build, I wanted to add a "No cats allowed" sticker but couldn't get it to stick. The chassis was slippery :doh:

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    • E ElectronProgrammer

      Holding everything inside with cotton string :-D At the time I couldn't afford a mobile chassis for my work computer (literally a PC I take to work) so I asked in my school for any chassis that they had for recycling. They gave me an old one that was not ATX compatible so I put some rubber feet on the back of the motherboard to avoid shorts, strapped it to the chassis using cotton string, put a smaller heatsink on the CPU (the chassis was thin), strapped the fan to the heatsink with more cotton string, drilled holes in four old CDs to mount the four laptop HDDs (using screws) and strapped that set with some more cotton string to the chassis. Then, because this computer would suffer some vibrations from the travels, I strapped everything with even more cotton string forming a sort of web over the motherboard to prevent anything from moving. To finalize the build, I wanted to add a "No cats allowed" sticker but couldn't get it to stick. The chassis was slippery :doh:

      C Offline
      C Offline
      CodeWraith
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      Two words: Oscar ton[^].

      I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats. His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.

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      • P PIEBALDconsult

        And here's me, looking at my stack of vintage OpenVMS systems. My AlphaServer DS10L is a "blade" server, but I ran the floppy cable and an EISA (?) cable out the back and into an old PC case which contains only the floppy drive, a DVD drive, another HDD, and a power supply to feed them. But it's not actually as big a hack as one might suspect... the AlphaServer and the PC were both made by Compaq, so it's kosher. https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/Computers.png[^] https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/BADGERback.jpg[^] Because it's a "blade" server, a DS10L has only two drive bays, mine has two HDDs in it. DEC used SCSI for peripherals, but Compaq used EISA :wtf: . The other week someone asked about what we do with old EISA HDDs; this is what I did with mine.

        M Offline
        M Offline
        MarkTJohnson
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        I'm guessing you don't spend a lot of time at that keyboard and monitor or there's a decent yoga mat just off camera.

        I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.

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        • R Ron Anders

          A and B drive cables, getcha some. WD st-225 perhaps?

          A Offline
          A Offline
          Andreas Mertens
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          I actually had and used a ST-506 drive on my Amiga computer. This was I believe the first commercially available 5MB drive. Was a full height drive too, so took up a lot of space. I remember too, was using it without a chassis, just plugged in with power and ribbon cable snaked out of the case. Sat beside the Amiga 2000 on the desk.

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          • M MarkTJohnson

            I'm guessing you don't spend a lot of time at that keyboard and monitor or there's a decent yoga mat just off camera.

            I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.

            P Offline
            P Offline
            PIEBALDconsult
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            Sadly, no. The VT220 went "pop" a few years ago. :sigh: I still have the keyboard and hopes of getting another VT of some sort. These days I use Putty to access these systems when I use them (which is rare).

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            • P PIEBALDconsult

              And here's me, looking at my stack of vintage OpenVMS systems. My AlphaServer DS10L is a "blade" server, but I ran the floppy cable and an EISA (?) cable out the back and into an old PC case which contains only the floppy drive, a DVD drive, another HDD, and a power supply to feed them. But it's not actually as big a hack as one might suspect... the AlphaServer and the PC were both made by Compaq, so it's kosher. https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/Computers.png[^] https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/BADGERback.jpg[^] Because it's a "blade" server, a DS10L has only two drive bays, mine has two HDDs in it. DEC used SCSI for peripherals, but Compaq used EISA :wtf: . The other week someone asked about what we do with old EISA HDDs; this is what I did with mine.

              S Offline
              S Offline
              Slacker007
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              PIEBALDconsult wrote:

              looking at my stack of vintage

              and here I thought you were going to expound on your stash of naughty mags. :laugh: :laugh:

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              • S Slacker007

                PIEBALDconsult wrote:

                looking at my stack of vintage

                and here I thought you were going to expound on your stash of naughty mags. :laugh: :laugh:

                P Offline
                P Offline
                PIEBALDconsult
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                Uh, hmmm... I have only one of those. I have the issue of Playboy from my birth month. :-O It contains Ursula Andress. :-D

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                • E ElectronProgrammer

                  Holding everything inside with cotton string :-D At the time I couldn't afford a mobile chassis for my work computer (literally a PC I take to work) so I asked in my school for any chassis that they had for recycling. They gave me an old one that was not ATX compatible so I put some rubber feet on the back of the motherboard to avoid shorts, strapped it to the chassis using cotton string, put a smaller heatsink on the CPU (the chassis was thin), strapped the fan to the heatsink with more cotton string, drilled holes in four old CDs to mount the four laptop HDDs (using screws) and strapped that set with some more cotton string to the chassis. Then, because this computer would suffer some vibrations from the travels, I strapped everything with even more cotton string forming a sort of web over the motherboard to prevent anything from moving. To finalize the build, I wanted to add a "No cats allowed" sticker but couldn't get it to stick. The chassis was slippery :doh:

                  P Offline
                  P Offline
                  PIEBALDconsult
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  You just reminded me that the HDDs in my MicroVAX are kinda/sorta/vaguely held in place with cable ties, because it didn't include the proper brackets. :wtf:

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                  • H honey the codewitch

                    I've seen a computer run out of a pizza box (on the Internet anyway) - just the mobo and drive and stuff sitting in a greasy box. When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws. Soon I will be propping my PC up on 4 soup cans to give my 1000 watt PSU's fan some clearance to see if that solves my overheat problem when I use 4k rendering. Gotta wait for some adapters for my 2 remaining fans though before I try that. Life goals are the setup from the movie Pi.

                    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                    L Offline
                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    Got a desk with drawers on one side, and a box (closet?) on the other one. Box is four drawers high. Mounted a mini-PC motherboard in it. Passive cooling, very silent. The current PC doesn't fit; a monster of a machine built by a gamer. I still miss that old mini-PC though. In terms of performance, it outran many full sized desktops. Remember I said passive cooling? It burnt in a summer three years ago, scorched the desk. I was proud of it, and consider it my "best" machine. The worst, could have burnt down the house.

                    Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

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                    • H honey the codewitch

                      I've seen a computer run out of a pizza box (on the Internet anyway) - just the mobo and drive and stuff sitting in a greasy box. When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws. Soon I will be propping my PC up on 4 soup cans to give my 1000 watt PSU's fan some clearance to see if that solves my overheat problem when I use 4k rendering. Gotta wait for some adapters for my 2 remaining fans though before I try that. Life goals are the setup from the movie Pi.

                      To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      dandy72
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      Back when I was in high school, I had a woodworking class and had spent a considerable amount of time thinking about designing a desk where the desk itself would be the chassis. I never went through with it however (which is probably for the best). The idea I had was that both front legs would essentially be enclosed cabinets with enough room to fit a motherboard and a bunch of peripherals; the back legs would've had power outlets running the full vertical length, essentially acting as extra-long power strips. Holes for fans, sliders for hot-swappable drives with front access...let your imagination run wild. I figured it would've been a heat trap, so it would've had a ton of fans. Which of course means the whole thing would've been noisy. Again...probably a good thing it never progressed any farther than a thought in my mind...

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                      • Kornfeld Eliyahu PeterK Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter

                        I once took apart my box and re-arranged the parts inside my table drawer... It gave me more space and a pinch of satisfaction when realized didn't blew up nothing...

                        "The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012

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                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        I did similar, but chose a closet. More space to vent heat. A mini-PC with "passive" cooling. It didn't cool enough. Still, I like your idea. I'm gonna try that with my next one.

                        Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

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                        • D dandy72

                          Back when I was in high school, I had a woodworking class and had spent a considerable amount of time thinking about designing a desk where the desk itself would be the chassis. I never went through with it however (which is probably for the best). The idea I had was that both front legs would essentially be enclosed cabinets with enough room to fit a motherboard and a bunch of peripherals; the back legs would've had power outlets running the full vertical length, essentially acting as extra-long power strips. Holes for fans, sliders for hot-swappable drives with front access...let your imagination run wild. I figured it would've been a heat trap, so it would've had a ton of fans. Which of course means the whole thing would've been noisy. Again...probably a good thing it never progressed any farther than a thought in my mind...

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                          L Offline
                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          Yeah, I made that mistake and got scorchmarks in my desk to prove it. You need ventilation and it'll work. No passive cooling if you use anything wood. My worst idea ever :D

                          Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • H honey the codewitch

                            I've seen a computer run out of a pizza box (on the Internet anyway) - just the mobo and drive and stuff sitting in a greasy box. When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws. Soon I will be propping my PC up on 4 soup cans to give my 1000 watt PSU's fan some clearance to see if that solves my overheat problem when I use 4k rendering. Gotta wait for some adapters for my 2 remaining fans though before I try that. Life goals are the setup from the movie Pi.

                            To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Mircea Neacsu
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #22

                            Just the other day I was told of a friend's mishap: the power supply in his chassis was a bit bigger than expected and the motherboard wouldn't fit. He cut a corner of the motherboard to make it fit.

                            Quote:

                            Don't force it, get a bigger hammer. Arthur Bloch

                            Mircea

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                            • P PIEBALDconsult

                              You just reminded me that the HDDs in my MicroVAX are kinda/sorta/vaguely held in place with cable ties, because it didn't include the proper brackets. :wtf:

                              E Offline
                              E Offline
                              ElectronProgrammer
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              I prefer the cotton string because it does not propagate vibrations as much as cable ties if the HDD is hanging in the air. The down side is that it deteriorates a lot faster. Vibrations were the reason I used four laptop HDDs in RAID instead of a single desktop HDD. Obviously, the situation I described was temporary and after some time I bought a proper chassis. But, if it works in your case and the HDDs are not shutting down/parking heads/becoming corrupted you can let it be. Anyway, I would recommend that you buy the brackets if you can and, if they are made of metal, they will help dissipate the heat from the HDDs. The HDDs will be healthier and live longer.

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                              • C CodeWraith

                                Two words: Oscar ton[^].

                                I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats. His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.

                                E Offline
                                E Offline
                                ElectronProgrammer
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                That is a little awkward to turn into a computer chassis :doh: . And looks oversized. I bet they would charge me an extra ticket to carry that on a public transport :sigh: . If instead you are referring to trashing the computer, it was brand new. I just could not afford a mobile chassis. The cheapest one at the time was a few thousand euros. Looking at your signature, if your are just reacting to my cat sticker, it was just a joke because of all the string inside the chassis :laugh: . I love cats :-D .

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • H honey the codewitch

                                  I've seen a computer run out of a pizza box (on the Internet anyway) - just the mobo and drive and stuff sitting in a greasy box. When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws. Soon I will be propping my PC up on 4 soup cans to give my 1000 watt PSU's fan some clearance to see if that solves my overheat problem when I use 4k rendering. Gotta wait for some adapters for my 2 remaining fans though before I try that. Life goals are the setup from the movie Pi.

                                  To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Marc Clifton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  honey the codewitch wrote:

                                  When I was young I put a 286 mobo and MFM HDD (remember those?) inside a cabinet with wood screws.

                                  I put a Commodore PET in a wooden box once. Not sure why, it was rather flimsy. Also, I used to work on various ROM "extensions" for the PET, so I had this PCB where I plugged in the ROM's and wired up two external multi-position switches for the $A000 and $B000 (or something like that) ROM select lines.

                                  Latest Articles:
                                  ASP.NET Core Web API: Plugin Controllers and Services

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                                  • L Lost User

                                    Got a desk with drawers on one side, and a box (closet?) on the other one. Box is four drawers high. Mounted a mini-PC motherboard in it. Passive cooling, very silent. The current PC doesn't fit; a monster of a machine built by a gamer. I still miss that old mini-PC though. In terms of performance, it outran many full sized desktops. Remember I said passive cooling? It burnt in a summer three years ago, scorched the desk. I was proud of it, and consider it my "best" machine. The worst, could have burnt down the house.

                                    Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

                                    E Offline
                                    E Offline
                                    ElectronProgrammer
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #26

                                    There are desks like that although most have the computer under a glass on the top and are made of metal. Search "computer desk case" and you may find something. Passive cooling anything needs to be in a place that is naturally well ventilated, preferably with a very small draft (imperceptible by humans). That is the little information that manufacturers held back or most people would not buy them. If it is not in a naturally well ventilated place, it will eventually burn. In the best case scenario it just stops working.

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                                    • E ElectronProgrammer

                                      There are desks like that although most have the computer under a glass on the top and are made of metal. Search "computer desk case" and you may find something. Passive cooling anything needs to be in a place that is naturally well ventilated, preferably with a very small draft (imperceptible by humans). That is the little information that manufacturers held back or most people would not buy them. If it is not in a naturally well ventilated place, it will eventually burn. In the best case scenario it just stops working.

                                      L Offline
                                      L Offline
                                      Lost User
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #27

                                      Enclosed in wood, it burns. And those desks expensive.

                                      Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • E ElectronProgrammer

                                        I prefer the cotton string because it does not propagate vibrations as much as cable ties if the HDD is hanging in the air. The down side is that it deteriorates a lot faster. Vibrations were the reason I used four laptop HDDs in RAID instead of a single desktop HDD. Obviously, the situation I described was temporary and after some time I bought a proper chassis. But, if it works in your case and the HDDs are not shutting down/parking heads/becoming corrupted you can let it be. Anyway, I would recommend that you buy the brackets if you can and, if they are made of metal, they will help dissipate the heat from the HDDs. The HDDs will be healthier and live longer.

                                        P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        PIEBALDconsult
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #28

                                        ElectronProgrammer wrote:

                                        buy the brackets

                                        Yeah, I'll get right on that. :-D This is an early-80s system, getting drives (narrow SCSI?) is difficult enough. I did check Ebay a few years ago. I should check a again, but I would likely need to buy another entire system. https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/ermine.png[^]

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                                        • P PIEBALDconsult

                                          ElectronProgrammer wrote:

                                          buy the brackets

                                          Yeah, I'll get right on that. :-D This is an early-80s system, getting drives (narrow SCSI?) is difficult enough. I did check Ebay a few years ago. I should check a again, but I would likely need to buy another entire system. https://www.codeproject.com/Uploads/Membership/Uploads/2587207/ermine.png[^]

                                          E Offline
                                          E Offline
                                          ElectronProgrammer
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #29

                                          I know the felling. My favorite computer that I have is a Compaq Contura Aero 4/25 and I used it so much the display melted (4bit gray scale 640x480). Can not find a compatible replacement anywhere :(( Only once I saw a used display from a dead Contura but they wanted 400€ :wtf: Nice computer you got there, by the way :-D

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