Assembling the SilverStone Sugo SG05

For how smitten I was with Cooler Master's inexpensive Elite 120 Advanced, it had a couple of kinks that made it less enjoyable to assemble than SilverStone's Sugo SG05 is. Having to provide space for an ATX power supply and a full 5.25" optical drive bay meant cutting into some of the case's internal space, and the drive cage wound up actually being detrimental to the design in some ways. The SG05 is a remarkably clean design and was very easy to assemble, especially for a case of its diminutive size.

Installing the motherboard was for the most part very easy; standoffs come built into the tray, although it's nigh impossible to screw the board in on one corner without removing the power supply. You'll have to remove the bracing bar from the PSU along with the drive caddies, but you would've needed to remove at least the caddies anyways. Call me lazy, but I actually just left the corner of the board floating and still found it plenty secure. More responsible users may be inclined to remove the PSU to completely mount the board. There's a healthy amount of space around the board to connect power cables and headers, as well.

Honestly, the worst part of assembling our system in the SG05 was the optical drive and 2.5" drive caddy. Getting the screws into the 2.5" drive required a bit of dexterity, while the slimline optical drive's tiny, tiny screws made installing it a nightmare. I'm not a particularly steady person in the first place, and these are the kinds of screws a housecat will swallow without a second thought. Part of that is just the nature of the screws used to mount slimline drives and I'm not sure how much SilverStone could've done to make this process easier. As for the 3.5" drive bay, I actually eschewed that entirely. That cage is removable, and I found that when assembling the SG05 the copious amount of cabling stemming from the PSU made it exceedingly difficult to install.

The drive bays seem to be where SilverStone decided to make their sacrifices in the name of getting the SG05 as small as it is. If you're determined enough you can jimmy the 3.5" drive cage in, but as you can see in the image above, the cable spaghetti nature of building in a small enclosure makes it pretty difficult. You'll also have to remove the front fascia (there are six plastic snaps you can bend up) to pop out the bay shield.

When you install an expansion card in the SG05, you're also going to be deciding just how far you're willing to push the limits of the enclosure. The ASUS GeForce GTX 560 Ti we use for testing our bigger cases did indeed fit in the SG05 (and we had to test with it, naturally), but that card is 10.2" long and it was really as big as you can get away with; I had to angle and tilt to fit it inside. Keep in mind that certain shorter card designs may have the PCIe power leads facing the back of the card instead of the top, too, so you'll want to account for that when calculating clearance.

Mushing all the cabling down and getting the shell back on the SG05 wasn't too difficult, but the tremendous amount of ventilation means that any lights inside the case are probably going to be visible. The memory kit we use for testing has LEDs on it and those LEDs are very easy to see while the system is running, along with the LEDs on the motherboard itself. Enterprising builders will have no trouble making the SG05 glow.

In and Around the SilverStone Sugo SG05 Testing Methodology
Comments Locked

70 Comments

View All Comments

  • doctormonroe - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    Silverstone have already released a SFF PSU that is 80 Plus Gold certified:
    http://www.silverstonetek.com/product.php?pid=342
  • Jackattak - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    By the gods that's one hot little number, and modular to boot! I looked it up on Newegg and they're selling it for $99USD right meow!

    http://www.Newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=17...
  • fr500 - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    The 450w power supply does get noisy. It's a very interesting case, my build is a few years old now and still going strong but it's been considerably modified over the years.

    I bought the original with the 300w PSU, had an i5 760 and a GTS250 back then. When I wanted to upgrade GPU the ST450-SF wasn't out so I went for a modular ATX PSU. A corsair H50 and a GTX570HD

    https://dl.dropbox.com/u/149537/Pictures/Photos/DS...
    https://dl.dropbox.com/u/149537/Pictures/Photos/DS...
    https://dl.dropbox.com/u/149537/Pictures/Photos/DS...

    Still going strong, cool and quiet behind my TV (CPU idles at 27c and gets to 50 under load)
  • fr500 - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    Had to give up the 3.5" bay for the H50 and the optical & 2.5" bay for the PSU, then I fitted 500GB laptop HDD and a 60GB SSD to the botton on the case and problem solved.
  • DanNeely - Monday, August 20, 2012 - link

    Silverstone has several other variants of the Sugo case with 600W PSUs. Using one of them should kill the PSU noise since anything smaller than a dual GPU card is unlikely to put enough load on it to ramp the fans above idle.
  • fr500 - Monday, August 20, 2012 - link

    Mine is not noisy :) it has an ATX PSU as you can see in the pictures
  • ImSpartacus - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    "The great thing about reviewing these Mini-ITX cases is that oftentimes there just isn't a whole lot to them,"

    Lol! I love hearing little reviewer-centric quips like that.

    ...so I guess this means you have time to do even MORE reviews, eh?
  • philipma1957 - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    The coolermaster has some good points, but it needed endless mods. I pull the cheesy face plate off it and mounted an aluminum grill, It added air but the case needs custom cables to allow for proper airflow. So if you want a nice machine with the cooker master be prepared to break out a lot of tools. I am still playing with it.

    When I am done It will have an;

    i7 3770k

    a 256gb msata ssd

    a full size samsung blu ray

    a full size seasonic psu

    a geforce gtx 670

    all noctua fans .

    It will be nice when I am done but it is not worth the effort.

    My guess is this silverstone is better by far in terms of ease of assembly
  • owned66 - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    i built one a while ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXOl7TKVwLM
  • Daniel Egger - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    Actually there's a *very* good reason to go with what you consider an unworthy 300W PSU: Better power efficiency at low power usage. Since it is almost impossible to cram equipment for 300W max consumption into such a case and even that is much more likely to run at <20% power utilisation rather than 80% it simply does not make any sense to have >300W PSU in a mini-ITX case.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now