Internal Design

Removing the cover of the X-QPack is as easy as unscrewing the three thumbscrews in the back and sliding it off. In this shot you can still see the protective film covering the inside of the three transparent windows.


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Another of just the cover, this time with the protective film removed.


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This is one of the most useful shots of the X-Pack, as it gives you the best overall idea how the case is arranged internally.


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We can immediately see the two distinct areas of the chassis; the higher of the two for the drives, power supply, and exhaust, and the lower for the motherboard, add-on cards, and, as we found out after we put a system into the unit, excessive cable clutter.

Before the power supply is taken out, the case seems like it'd be impossible to work in, and in practice we found this to be quite true.


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Once it's taken out though, there is actually quite a bit of free space inside the QPack. Here we can see all of the possible locations of the computer's drives. There's space for two hard drives, two 5.25", and one more 3.5", be it external or internal. It even looks as though a courageous modder could squeeze another one or two hard drives on the opposite side, or possibly components for a water-cooling setup.


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External Design Internal Design cont’d
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  • SilthDraeth - Sunday, July 3, 2005 - link

    In response to my above post, I simply mean to convey that if this case does well at heat disipation, and providing a well designed, thoughtful case for the microATX formfacter, then the only disadvanage you could say it has compared to say a microBTX or any other small form factor design, would be the inability to support those motherboards. In all things buy what works best for you.
  • SilthDraeth - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    Anyone that reads Porkster's comments knows he is anti AMD. But Porkster, if not micro atx, then what form factor?
  • slashbinslashbash - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    I agree, great review. I too have been thinking about building a SFF PC, and this case adds a lot of options. I especially like that it can handle extra PCI slots and 2 optical drives. The handle is pretty cool too :)
  • Tamale - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    I dunno man.. with cases this well designed and intel under so much fire I think atx is here for a long time yet to come
  • NordicNINE - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    #20, I was thinking of using that board for a Media Center PC since it has a DX9 video onboard.
    I had one earlier for a client and played with it a bit before hand. Plenty for a HTPC (MCE2k5) machine.
    I wish it had a DVI port though since I want to get a DLP TV later this year.
  • porkster - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    Pity it's ATX. It's a bit late int he day to be making ATX cases.

    .
  • kaborka - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    I've had my eye on the MSI microATX board with the RS480 chipset for building a HTPC. It has the onboard Radeon graphics + it's socket 939. This looks like it might be just the box for it. (Dunno if this board has 1000MHz HT, though.)
  • NordicNINE - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    I was just going to buy this case.

    I hope this review doesn't make it harder to find. :)
  • Noriaki - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    Hey, great timing. I've been thinking about shunting my current machine as is over to a Linux box and building a brand new gaming rig. My Athlon XP2100+ is a little slow these days ;)

    And I would love for it to be a nice compact case for LANing. This article couldn't be better timed.

    Are there any MicroATX boards that support 1000Mhz HyperTransport and the dual core Athlon 64s? I understand Via's chipset is a bit sketchy on A64x2s, and the K8M800 is 800 HT only I believe.
  • Tamale - Saturday, July 2, 2005 - link

    lot of good questions here... I'll try to answer as many as possible..

    first off, yes, I wish I could've put in a more detailed review of the power supply itself - I'm currently working on getting a testbed that would be much more stressful to see how power supplies will stand up to it.

    as far as dimensions, stromgald is right that it has the right mounting hole positions but that it's just shallower.. if you had a particularly shallow optical drive and/or were careful with the cables you could probably use a normal PSU.

    I did have two hard drives installed at the end.. the seagate (sata) is behind the western digital (pata).. this was my attempt at putting as much of a load on the power supply as I could and seeing how the case handled the extra heat.

    my comment about the excess cable clutter was simply an attempt to say that if our motherboard had the headers for extra usb/firewire cables I could've routed those cables to the appropriate places on the mobo instead of just cramming them up front.

    I hope to get a system for testing power supplies in a much more informational manner very soon.

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