Computer Case

I think 5 and 8 are working best. Try an island within the perf as well.

Great thought process here!

Great work Louis! #5 is by far my favorite, followed by #2 and #8. The latter two being very Dieter Rams.

As you mentioned, the size of the holes/slots will be very important. To ‘transparent’, seeing too much of the inside, will likely not add the visual perception of the computer case. I’d advise you to test a couple of options once you get to the prototype phase. Looking forward to your next post!

Hmm, that would be cool. The sliding I was thinking of was just to retract the bottom pipes. Having handles reveal themselves would be cool. A really nice mechanism would make this really fun to use.

My use case right now is that you tilt the computer down to unplug the cabling. From there, it’s quite easy to lift it from the handles that are usually at the bottom.

Thanks for taking the time to sketch! :smiley:

Something kind of like this?

It seems like a fairly tight perforated pattern throughout the top is a winner, I’ll have a look at what else I could do in that direction…

Thank you, kind sir! :slight_smile:

I actually started off in a very Dieter Rams direction with #3 and #6. Going with the non-offset perforations to act as a geometric feature rather than a uniform backdrop. Sort of like this sucker:

I actually tried the typical offset hole grid which provides more airflow but it wasn’t doing much as far as styling goes.

Agreed as far as hole sizing. Seeing too much of the insides will wreck the look. I think thickness of the top plate will be one of the driving factors. A thicker plate will hide the inside at more viewing angles.

Louis, that is a good example of what I’m talking about. Older MacBooks did this a lot as well as their older towers.

Very nice read! I’d love to see a compact desktop PC with as few compromises as posible. But I have a few questions; could dust be an issue involving your design?
Have you considered liquid cooling? And lastly, a desktop pc includes many other peripherals that impact portability, what could be done for that? Im very curious to see where this project is going.

Best of luck!

Dust may be an issue. My plan for that is to have the air intake be at the bottom and use magnetic meshing to act as an air filter so it’s easy to take out and clean.

I haven’t really considered liquid cooling as a primary concern. Due to the size of the system, some sacrifices are required in the choice of components. For one, full sized graphics cards will not be compatible. I think an all in one 120mm liquid cooler will fit though.

Portability is a bit of a tough one. There’s a pretty big range of use cases. Anywhere from people that need to move their computer often in their home or office, people that occasionally need to bring their computer with them (mobile workers, LAN parties) all the way to people that are constantly traveling and need the power of a desktop (A/V production, location based trades…). I’m aiming the first two categories. People that want a clean looking desktop that facilitates mobility.

When moving around my small ITX system, I’ve came across two major issues I hope to have solved with my current design. As you mentioned, moving the peripherals is a pain. I find myself putting my wireless keyboard and mouse on top of the case but it’s flat and smooth so then end up sliding off to the floor… That’s the reason for the lip up top, you can put your mouse and other knick knacks in that pocket if you’re just moving from room to room. I also, found the back end of the system with all of the IO has a lot of exposed fragile parts like dongles, wifi antenas and just little cutouts and ports. The pipes at the bottom naturally cover up that fragile part. Also, once you put the computer in a bag, it creates a zone that’s safe from crushing to put other peripherals.

Alright, things are starting to gel!

Michael, I’m having a look at that island design, it seems like making everything fairly tight and putting it on an edge may look ok. I still don’t have something clean enough though.

I started looking at a colour palette. The more I’ve been working on this design, the more I’ve been liking the idea of having it available in a variety of colour combinations including some really bright ones to contrast the subdued design. I’ve really been feeling the salmon pink Nike has been using recently. I have to admit I have a soft spot for sea foam greens, but I’ve also taken it from some of the Ikea reference I’ve had since the beginning. Hey there also complimentary colours so that’s cool :laughing: I also had a nice blue with a slight purple tint but it just didn’t seem to fit anywhere, so it didn’t make the cut.

I used coolors.co to help me in finding the colours. It’s a really great tool I thought I’d share. It’s a well thought out tool that allows for quick exploration as well as honing done of hues.

Anyhow, on to the exciting stuff! Here’s my first go at some renders. At some point it seems there’s only so much you can do with a lifeless 3D model and need some renders or ideally some physical prototypes. It certainly has given me a second breath on this project as far as motivation too.

I tried colours on the plastic part and it really gets a Fisher Price look, I’ll keep at it but may be in vain. The white version looks pretty lifeless, I’ll see what can be done about it, maybe swapping out the white painted part for anodized…

More to come, I was just really excited to share these images :smiley:

That is coming together nicely!

I’m really liking these renderings!

I do think that you can maybe be a little more expressive with the ventilation, and maybe not need to stuff your components into the edge so tight.

Keep em coming! I do like the color palette that you’re working with. Don’t forget about your external connections too! Power, monitor, etc and is there a way that your case can manage those cables?

Wow! The rendererings are looking great. Keep up the good work!

Thanks Michael! At this point, I don’t think I have a whole left to make this a portfolio piece. A last round of tidying up the model, a few more renderings and putting the project together as a story.

Part of me really wants to make a prototype though. :laughing: Even tempted to try making the center ‘plastic’ part in bent plywood. :unamused:

I want to have a last round to look at the top panel before wrapping up this project. You’re right about having a bit more breathing room…

I don’t think it’s too obvious with the material I’ve posted how the internal components are laid out or how the cables would run so I made a little animation to illustrate that.




Thanks Leo!

I’m really enjoying this project, and I like that green! I agree with the white looking clinical, have you tried the green with a softened black, like a charcoal shade? The renders look great!

Is there a way to make the cable solution suit the intended portability? Maybe a quick connector or mini dock style thing that fits nicely underneath? The way I’m seeing it the cables connect at 90° to the bottom of the case, which could make it hard to fit hands underneath to plug them in and pull them out with that orientation.

Thanks Andy! I did try green on black, it did look ok but I preferred the white plastic bit. For the white, I think anodized may be better combination than white on white. There’s really a lot of colour combinations that looked good. A built to order colour picker might even make sense.

I’m not a big fan of creating a proprietary cabling system. I see the cabling as an essential part of the function of the case. I’d need to have a physical prototype to judge how difficult cabling is. If it truly is an issue that needs to be solved with an accessory box, I might as well scrap the whole thing and go back to the drawing board. :open_mouth:

The way I intend the cabling to work is similar to the Apple G4 cube, you tumble the case over with the pipe acting as a hinge. From there you can pop in your cables.

With that said, it does look like there are a lot of solutions poping up for people that want to plug in a single cable. For example, some new monitors are coming with a single USB type C connections for the display stream, USB data and even enough power for a laptop. The display can then be daisy chained and have a USB hub built in. With a setup like this, it would be possible to plug just a power cable and a single USB cable to get access to your whole set of monitors and peripherals. Not to mention it would be easy to swap between your desktop and laptop/tablet.

Ah cool, I hadn’t even thought of usb-c cables. I imagine new cable tech would help keep a project like this as clutter free as possible!

I love reading this thread. I love the style, and seeing the whole thought and development process. Also… love the salmon pink (that’s something I didn’t think I’d ever say!).

Thanks for the kind words :slight_smile: My biggest takeaway from this project has been to push beyond my preconceptions and dig a deeper to find a solution. Even though I didn’t share it in the forum that much, I had an initial direction I was dead set on for the first few months. I guess I was as stubborn about that idea as I was stubborn to find a better solution that it took almost a year to wrap this up!

As I had mentioned earlier in the thread, I snatched the salmon pink from Nike’s summer 2016 women’s lineup. If you’re a fan, have a look at this pairing with a deep blue.

I’m starting the layout for my portfolio this evening, hopefully I can share that as well in the coming days!

the SGI Tezro and O2 are also weird machines… also way ahead of their time… (Tezro 2003) O2 (1997)

I had an O2, I would kill to still have that machine, the case looks awesome even by todays standards. Had an awesome modular chassis too where each component could slide in and out like a server blade.

I dreamed of having an O2! Takes me back…