NCASE M1: a crowdfunded Mini-ITX case (updates in first post)

Looks awesome...!

Are those the stock cables...? If so, a bit more into how you cable wrangled them, please...!?!

And what is that material you have at the top of the chassis...?

Yeah they're stock cables. I just plug everything in the PSU and board then shove all the cables in the back making sure they don't hit the bottom fan.

The top is a foam dust filter I cut to size and glued to one of my silver tops. I use it when I'm not running tests.
 
Just ordered the Corsair H100i Platinum.. Dont care for the RGB stuff, but was on sale, so the same price as the Pro model and the RGB fans are easier to sell to the 15 year olds - will add A12x25 PWMs. So will be cheaper in the end. And apparantly the Platinum coolers are made by CoolIT and not Asetek (gen 6).. Dont know if that is good or bad. But should be more quiet, and have a larger coldplate (dont think it will have any effect in practicallity (only for TR4 or likewise).
 
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my Evga CLC 240 fits with standard width fans, but it is a tight fit. Debating on whether or not I should swap it for slim fans since the bend off of the radiator is pretty hard.
 

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my Evga CLC 240 fits with standard width fans, but it is a tight fit. Debating on whether or not I should swap it for slim fans since the bend off of the radiator is pretty hard.

I mounted it the other way to avoid the bend and then routed the tubes toward the power supply.
 
my Evga CLC 240 fits with standard width fans, but it is a tight fit. Debating on whether or not I should swap it for slim fans since the bend off of the radiator is pretty hard.
Why not just have the rad outwards to the sidepanel and the fans on the inside? (pull config). That would give more room for the tubes.. Is there anything negative about that way of mounting it?
 
The top is a foam dust filter I cut to size and glued to one of my silver tops. I use it when I'm not running tests.
Great idea!
This foam could be good to prevent dust to enter the M1 when stopped.
Any link to the product you have installed?
 
Why not just have the rad outwards to the sidepanel and the fans on the inside? (pull config). That would give more room for the tubes.. Is there anything negative about that way of mounting it?
Pull will also help for cleaning the dust, which will be on the exterior of the rad instead of inbetween rad and fan with push
 
Yeah this is much better.

Wll post back once I have a chance to bench it.
 

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Hey everyone,
I have a pretty fine tuned Ncase system (see my sig) but I am looking to go up to a 2080 or 2080ti. How is everyone cooling the video cards today? My 980ti with an accelero III has been such an ideal solution for noise and temps.

Or is the best bet to get a larger video card that fills the bottom but has a better cooling solution?
 
I think it was this https://www.moddiy.com/products/Premium-Dust-Filter-Material-(50cm-x-40cm-x-3mm)-.html

I've done the demcifilter thing and they filter very well, I just hate the super weak magnets that hold it. This is permanent and I can use an air compressor to blow it out.

This is great, but doesn't is obstruct exhaust from the PSU? Even when idle and with the fan off, you still need heat to escape out the top. By the way, I have the Demciflex top filter and I have no issue with the magnets, they keep it firmly in place, so I'm puzzled by the issue you're having. I know they only fit one way though due the polarity, so maybe you had it flipped.

Anyway, I would love to do this with my right-side panel, so I can have streamlined bottom-to-top airflow when I get the window panel, and not have air escape out the right side of the case, but I'm not sure the foam would fit there. Do you think it would fit or is it hard to say?
 
This is great, but doesn't is obstruct exhaust from the PSU? Even when idle and with the fan off, you still need heat to escape out the top. By the way, I have the Demciflex top filter and I have no issue with the magnets, they keep it firmly in place, so I'm puzzled by the issue you're having. I know they only fit one way though due the polarity, so maybe you had it flipped.

Anyway, I would love to do this with my right-side panel, so I can have streamlined bottom-to-top airflow when I get the window panel, and not have air escape out the right side of the case, but I'm not sure the foam would fit there. Do you think it would fit or is it hard to say?

It might obstruct the PSU exhaust. Not totally sure. I'm not too worried about it either way.

Something was wrong with my top filter in that, no matter which way I oriented it, a good 30% would not remain attached with the magnet. I got tired of fighting with it.

In regards to the right side panel, I just did a ghetto tape job with a sample piece of filter and it was able to close without an issue.
 
I'm really impressed with this case and the clc 240.
I have two noctua chromax 120mm on the radiator in pull config. Two under the rtx2070 set as intake onto the rtx 2070.
The 9700k is set to 5.0ghz at 1.35vcore. CPU is delided. The rtx 2070 stock.

Running 10 loops of timespy and the max CPU was 64C.
GPU maxed out at 67C.

Intel XTU 15 minutes, max CPU 66C
 
Dear all, this thread was really helpful when I was trying to get advice on building my NCASE, which also happened to be my first PC build. I always wanted to pay it forward by creating a build vlog or tutorial to help those who wanted to liquid cool their NCASE, and I finally created a step by step tutorial video. I am working on a separate video that focuses on some of the nuances in the NCASE (e.g. where I drilled holes to fit my GPU, though not necessary for all NCASE builds), and I will upload that soon as well.

Here's the link to all the parts I used for those looking for NCASE compatible parts: https://pcpartpicker.com/b/w3vnTW
Granted, there are newer GPUs and CPUs available now but the principles still apply.



Again, I really appreciate all your help and hope this video helps those who are interested in the super compact NCASE chassis but may not know where to begin. Thank you!
 
Well first of all I dont understand what "Fans external mean"? Secondly the one saying "120x2 - fans internal, pull" is only .8 degress more. That is WAAY withing margin of error.

Fans external means they were mounted to the bracket. I included two pictures in the post. It is the one where you can see the fans.

Fans external push won both tests by a small margin. It was repeatable. It really feels like you don't believe any of my testing and I'm not sure why.
 
Fans external means they were mounted to the bracket. I included two pictures in the post. It is the one where you can see the fans.

Fans external push won both tests by a small margin. It was repeatable. It really feels like you don't believe any of my testing and I'm not sure why.

Sorry what?.. What makes you say that? :confused:

I was commenting on doug_7506 comment about pull vs push would yield different results. That does not really have anything to do with you - from my POV. Maybe it does from yours? :)

On another note: I am not sure I understand the whole external vs internal. I get that external means the fans are mounted to the bracket. But how can they be mounted external in a pull config? And how can they be mounted internal in a push config? Maybe I'm just sleep deprived.
 
Sorry what?.. What makes you say that? :confused:

I was commenting on doug_7506 comment about pull vs push would yield different results. That does not really have anything to do with you - from my POV. Maybe it does from yours? :)

On another note: I am not sure I understand the whole external vs internal. I get that external means the fans are mounted to the bracket. But how can they be mounted external in a pull config? And how can they be mounted internal in a push config? Maybe I'm just sleep deprived.

Regardless if you have the fan between the bracket and the radiator or the radiator between the bracket and the fan you can still rotate the fan to blow in either direction.
 
Regardless if you have the fan between the bracket and the radiator or the radiator between the bracket and the fan you can still rotate the fan to blow in either direction.
Sure you can.. But then they arent intake fans if you turn them around. There are only two ways to configure them for intake - as I can see it in my mind. Either mounted to the bracket with the fan behind (push) or the rad mounted to the bracket with fans behind that (pull).
 
It might obstruct the PSU exhaust. Not totally sure. I'm not too worried about it either way.

Something was wrong with my top filter in that, no matter which way I oriented it, a good 30% would not remain attached with the magnet. I got tired of fighting with it.

In regards to the right side panel, I just did a ghetto tape job with a sample piece of filter and it was able to close without an issue.

I see, thanks very much for that information!
 
Sure you can.. But then they arent intake fans if you turn them around. There are only two ways to configure them for intake - as I can see it in my mind. Either mounted to the bracket with the fan behind (push) or the rad mounted to the bracket with fans behind that (pull).

Imagine the bracket is on the left.

2519095b4f.jpg
 
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Imagine the bracket is on the left.

View attachment 140274

I think I am beginning to understand what it means.. But I think the wording was difficult for me (a non-english-first-speaker)

The two in the middle are outtake fans. Not intake. Outtake fans makes little sense when useing Accelero (outtake). Is this what has been tested? (I think this is what I did not understand - as I thought they all were intake fans)
 
Imagine the bracket is on the left.

View attachment 140274

I think readers had different meanings associated with the words "push" and "pull". These images show that the intended meanings are to push air from the fan into the radiator or to pull air through the radiator into the fan.

The confusion may be that that some people thought "pull" meant a fan pulled air into the case and "push" meant the fan push air out of the case, meanings that are better described as "intake" and "exhaust".
 
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I have updated the spreadsheet to be more clear. Additional suggestions are welcome.
 
Hi guys, small question.
Now the corsair sf750 is available, so is it better to go sf760 gold or sf600 platinium?

Thanks a lot
 
Hey everyone,
I have a pretty fine tuned Ncase system (see my sig) but I am looking to go up to a 2080 or 2080ti. How is everyone cooling the video cards today? My 980ti with an accelero III has been such an ideal solution for noise and temps.

Or is the best bet to get a larger video card that fills the bottom but has a better cooling solution?

I went from a Vega64 with a Morpheus II to a 2080ti ultra. The third one has been fine thus far, the first two died playing older games.

cPyWoJQ.jpg


It's such a tight fit against the bottom slim fans that I had to take the screws off the shroud. Temps are decent, and it's not too loud.
 
Very stoked about this! I built a custom PC in an Ncase M1 V5 about a year and a half ago. i7 8700k OC'ed to 5.0ghz, 32gb of OC'ed RAM, 1080ti SC2 from EVGA, Samsung 960 Pro 1TB m.2 NVME SSD, and it ran awesome!

I primarily used it as a music performance machine for running all my .vst synths at insane resolution with tons of polyphony. It ran all my music software awesome with a usb audio interface.

Secondarily, it was used as a gaming monster which was very fun with the fast CPU and insane 1080ti GPU. I loved it.

My main music studio computer was a Mac and it is finally crapping out.... I couldn't bounce mixes anymore. All my $3,000-worth of audio interface and external DSP cards for audio mixes are all Firewire-based gear from Universal Audio, the audio interface is a Firewire Apollo. So I was stuck with no way to run all my gear on my Mac anymore and a blazing fast PC that had no firewire ports...

Did not want to give up GPU performance and also did not want to give up the small form factor of the NCase M1 ITX case, so I bought a Sonnet Allegro Firewire card, an m.2 to PCI-e adapter https://www.amazon.com/EXPLOMOS-NGF...words=m.2+pci-e+adapter&qid=1549681734&sr=8-3 and some PCI-e ribbon extension riser cables.

Spent today figuring out how to absolutely cram all this in there! I had to remove one of the two fans I had bringing air in through the bottom of the case (who knows how much those were doing anyway), but it all friggin' worked! Thankfully there is an extra slot on the Asus ROG Strix z270-ITX motherboard for an m.2 SSD on the bottom of the board, so I just moved the SSD down there from the top slot. The peripheral power cable and ribbon routing was a real mind bender but it all fit and it all works.

So for those who do not want to give up the beautiful SFF of the Ncase M1 but still want to add an extra PCI-e card to their computers for whatever other purpose, which in my case was legacy peripheral connection additions via Firewire, you can do it through the m.2 slot on the top of the board! I researched this for a long time before I did it but I still couldn't believe it when it all worked.

Do you guys see any potential issues here? Any heat stuff to be worried about?

As you can probably tell, I should get some custom power cabling. Where's the best place to get this nowadays? Alibaba? I am not quite sure how to measure the distances accurately for the custom cabling... This all fits as it is now, just doesn't look great...

Cheers,
MIDIBoss
 

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Very stoked about this! I built a custom PC in an Ncase M1 V5 about a year and a half ago. i7 8700k OC'ed to 5.0ghz, 32gb of OC'ed RAM, 1080ti SC2 from EVGA, Samsung 960 Pro 1TB m.2 NVME SSD, and it ran awesome!

I primarily used it as a music performance machine for running all my .vst synths at insane resolution with tons of polyphony. It ran all my music software awesome with a usb audio interface.

Secondarily, it was used as a gaming monster which was very fun with the fast CPU and insane 1080ti GPU. I loved it.

My main music studio computer was a Mac and it is finally crapping out.... I couldn't bounce mixes anymore. All my $3,000-worth of audio interface and external DSP cards for audio mixes are all Firewire-based gear from Universal Audio, the audio interface is a Firewire Apollo. So I was stuck with no way to run all my gear on my Mac anymore and a blazing fast PC that had no firewire ports...

Did not want to give up GPU performance and also did not want to give up the small form factor of the NCase M1 ITX case, so I bought a Sonnet Allegro Firewire card, an m.2 to PCI-e adapter https://www.amazon.com/EXPLOMOS-NGF...words=m.2+pci-e+adapter&qid=1549681734&sr=8-3 and some PCI-e ribbon extension riser cables.

Spent today figuring out how to absolutely cram all this in there! I had to remove one of the two fans I had bringing air in through the bottom of the case (who knows how much those were doing anyway), but it all friggin' worked! Thankfully there is an extra slot on the Asus ROG Strix z270-ITX motherboard for an m.2 SSD on the bottom of the board, so I just moved the SSD down there from the top slot. The peripheral power cable and ribbon routing was a real mind bender but it all fit and it all works.

So for those who do not want to give up the beautiful SFF of the Ncase M1 but still want to add an extra PCI-e card to their computers for whatever other purpose, which in my case was legacy peripheral connection additions via Firewire, you can do it through the m.2 slot on the top of the board! I researched this for a long time before I did it but I still couldn't believe it when it all worked.

Do you guys see any potential issues here? Any heat stuff to be worried about?

As you can probably tell, I should get some custom power cabling. Where's the best place to get this nowadays? Alibaba? I am not quite sure how to measure the distances accurately for the custom cabling... This all fits as it is now, just doesn't look great...

Cheers,
MIDIBoss


Way to go! The fact that your motherboard has two PCI-E M.2 slots is great for this type of mod. It's not even a mod. It's been a while since anyone posted about using an M.2 to PCI-E adapter.

I don't think there's much you can do about routing the PCI-E ribbon cable. Those shouldn't be bent or flexed unnecessarily. The black Molex power cable for the Firewire card might fit under the graphics card instead of over it, but really, it's not blocking anything now, so why bother.
 
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Way to go! The fact that your motherboard has two PCI-E M.2 slots is great for this type of mod. It's not even a mod. It's been a while since anyone posted about using an M.2 to PCI-E adapter.

I don't think there's much you can do about routing the PCI-E ribbon cable. Those shouldn't be bent or flexed unnecessarily. The black Molex power cable for the Firewire card might fit under the graphics card instead of over it, but really, it's not blocking anything now, so why bother.

Thanks! Yeah, re: the Firewire card ribbon cable, as you can see, in order for it to work I had to bend it back over on itself and flip it up the opposite side of the GPU. The fact that there's really only a few MM of clearance between the FW card and the GPU front fans meant I thought it would be a little risky to route it that way. Didn't want a GPU fan blade to get caught in the cable. So I flipped it around after the connection and routed it under the FW card and up the opposite side of the FW card, as seen in the 2nd picture. Think that's ok?

As it is now, it's not really putting much pressure on the ribbon cable connector on the FW PCI-e card connector end. There was a pretty good amount of space so that I don't think it's really stressing anything. If it fails, I can always get another one, but with the minimal amount of pressure on the ribbon cable I don't see it being a problem... Time will tell I guess.

Good thinking on the peripheral power cable routing. I'll consider that if I have to open it up for any other reason!

Cheers,
MB
 
Thanks! Yeah, re: the Firewire card ribbon cable, as you can see, in order for it to work I had to bend it back over on itself and flip it up the opposite side of the GPU. The fact that there's really only a few MM of clearance between the FW card and the GPU front fans meant I thought it would be a little risky to route it that way. Didn't want a GPU fan blade to get caught in the cable. So I flipped it around after the connection and routed it under the FW card and up the opposite side of the FW card, as seen in the 2nd picture. Think that's ok?

As it is now, it's not really putting much pressure on the ribbon cable connector on the FW PCI-e card connector end. There was a pretty good amount of space so that I don't think it's really stressing anything. If it fails, I can always get another one, but with the minimal amount of pressure on the ribbon cable I don't see it being a problem... Time will tell I guess.

Good thinking on the peripheral power cable routing. I'll consider that if I have to open it up for any other reason!

Cheers,
MB
I guess the firewire card wouldn't work in the bottom m2 slot? Would think the cable routing would be simpler if it did, but of course it wouldn't be that easy. All that really matters is that it works now, good job!
 
I guess the firewire card wouldn't work in the bottom m2 slot? Would think the cable routing would be simpler if it did, but of course it wouldn't be that easy. All that really matters is that it works now, good job!

Thanks for the idea! I definitely thought about that, and technically it would work (PCI works on that slot) but unfortunately the only m.2 to PCI-e adapter I could find with good reviews has a PCI-e receiver that is too tall for the side of the case to be able to close, even if you bent the ribbon cable (which might cause other problems) the plastic PCI-e receiver is too tall to clear the case side closing on its own. Would've been a lot easier to go that route! Oh well. You're right, good thing it works as-is!
 
Very stoked about this! I built a custom PC in an Ncase M1 V5 about a year and a half ago. i7 8700k OC'ed to 5.0ghz, 32gb of OC'ed RAM, 1080ti SC2 from EVGA, Samsung 960 Pro 1TB m.2 NVME SSD, and it ran awesome!

I primarily used it as a music performance machine for running all my .vst synths at insane resolution with tons of polyphony. It ran all my music software awesome with a usb audio interface.

Secondarily, it was used as a gaming monster which was very fun with the fast CPU and insane 1080ti GPU. I loved it.

My main music studio computer was a Mac and it is finally crapping out.... I couldn't bounce mixes anymore. All my $3,000-worth of audio interface and external DSP cards for audio mixes are all Firewire-based gear from Universal Audio, the audio interface is a Firewire Apollo. So I was stuck with no way to run all my gear on my Mac anymore and a blazing fast PC that had no firewire ports...

Did not want to give up GPU performance and also did not want to give up the small form factor of the NCase M1 ITX case, so I bought a Sonnet Allegro Firewire card, an m.2 to PCI-e adapter https://www.amazon.com/EXPLOMOS-NGF...words=m.2+pci-e+adapter&qid=1549681734&sr=8-3 and some PCI-e ribbon extension riser cables.

Spent today figuring out how to absolutely cram all this in there! I had to remove one of the two fans I had bringing air in through the bottom of the case (who knows how much those were doing anyway), but it all friggin' worked! Thankfully there is an extra slot on the Asus ROG Strix z270-ITX motherboard for an m.2 SSD on the bottom of the board, so I just moved the SSD down there from the top slot. The peripheral power cable and ribbon routing was a real mind bender but it all fit and it all works.

So for those who do not want to give up the beautiful SFF of the Ncase M1 but still want to add an extra PCI-e card to their computers for whatever other purpose, which in my case was legacy peripheral connection additions via Firewire, you can do it through the m.2 slot on the top of the board! I researched this for a long time before I did it but I still couldn't believe it when it all worked.

Do you guys see any potential issues here? Any heat stuff to be worried about?

As you can probably tell, I should get some custom power cabling. Where's the best place to get this nowadays? Alibaba? I am not quite sure how to measure the distances accurately for the custom cabling... This all fits as it is now, just doesn't look great...

Cheers,
MIDIBoss

That is nice. Before I started spec'ing out my NCase build I was making sure I could add a 10gig network card. So I did a lot of research and there are mulitple ways of doing this. Your approach is one of the easier to do and gets the job done nicely. Personally I couldnt do it that way as I wanted a 3 slot graphics card. But yea. You can use M2 ports (often they have 2 now a days), or just ditch the graphics card and use the PCI-E port.. But not a lot wants to do this and they would also be able to use a PCI-E splitter (bifurcation) - requires some internal rearranging of components.. But dont forget. All modern motherboards also have Wifi and that is attached with a M2 port also, so can you live without Wifi (I could) then that is also a go-to solution (wether it actually works I dont know). And lastly.. There is thunderbolt on the Asrock board (Z390) which also can also be used as a PCI-E port. This is the most elegang solution.. Also a lot easier to attach and de-attach if you move you rig around a lot but dont need to take the extra I/O with you.
 
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That is nice. Before I started spec'ing out my NCase build I was making sure I could add a 10gig network card. So I did a lot of research and there are mulitple ways of doing this. Your approach is one of the easier to do and gets the job done nicely. Personally I couldnt do it that way as I wanted a 3 slot graphics card. But yea. You can use M2 ports (often they have 2 now a days), or just ditch the graphics card and use the PCI-E port.. But not a lot wants to do this and they would also be able to use a PCI-E splitter (bifurcation) - requires some internal rearranging of components.. But dont forget. All modern motherboards also have Wifi and that is attached with a M2 port also, so can you live without Wifi (I could) then that is also a go-to solution (wether it actually works I dont know). And lastly.. There is thunderbolt on the Asrock board (Z390) which also can also be used as a PCI-E port. This is the most elegang solution.. Also a lot easier to attach and de-attach if you move you rig around a lot but dont need to take the extra I/O with you.
The wifi cards often use a different key on the m2 slot though, so you'd have to find an adaptor which also uses that key. If it has two notches on the slot, then you'll be limited to 2x pcie lanes (and compatible adaptors).
 
I went from a Vega64 with a Morpheus II to a 2080ti ultra. The third one has been fine thus far, the first two died playing older games.

View attachment 140600

It's such a tight fit against the bottom slim fans that I had to take the screws off the shroud. Temps are decent, and it's not too loud.

Awesome. I was looking at the EVGA 2080ti Black and also the XC black. The black at $999 is very tempting compared to a high end 2080 non TI card which can be $850+. I plan to play games @ 3440x1440 but I normally don't overclock my cards too much. I'm more likely to undervolt them if anything.
 
The wifi cards often use a different key on the m2 slot though, so you'd have to find an adaptor which also uses that key. If it has two notches on the slot, then you'll be limited to 2x pcie lanes (and compatible adaptors).
Yes, they are probably "A E key".. Lots of adapters out there for them. And ya, they are probably X2 speed. Think that is still plenty for something like FireWire ;)

Fx https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Ris...82-46ee-a6cd-74f1d0a5e25d&transAbTest=ae803_5
 
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