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

I have the 2080XC in the Case and can say the NF-A12 working fine. I have only a bit "noise" when I torture the graphics card over a long time. Then the EVGA fans are spinning up to 1600 rpm and they are loud.

Overall, you will need fans underneath it, because of the airflow through the case. Else you will reuse the hot air from the card.
 
Does anyone have any suggestions for taller case feet? I'm thinking that I need a bit more clearance under the case to help with airflow, but I can't seem to find suitable replacement feet. I know the Lian Li SD-04B feet are a popular choice, but they don't seem to be available in the UK at present. I've seen people using hifi feet but these all seem to take an M4 screw and I'm fairly sure the standard NCase feet are secure with an M3 (and I don't fancy expanding the existing holes).
 
Cheers for the link, but I'm looking for a supplier in the UK. Mnpctech do some nice feet for the M1, for example, but shipping from the US to the UK makes it not worthwhile.
 
Cheers for the link, but I'm looking for a supplier in the UK. Mnpctech do some nice feet for the M1, for example, but shipping from the US to the UK makes it not worthwhile.
I can't find it again, but somewhere he wrote that the 3D-Model of the feets are available. It's the option to let it print for yourself.
 
Cheers for the link, but I'm looking for a supplier in the UK. Mnpctech do some nice feet for the M1, for example, but shipping from the US to the UK makes it not worthwhile.

M3 screws of many lengths can be bought from hobby supply shops. Usually in aluminium which is very easy to shorten if required.

These guys based in your neck of the woods would be great. :)
 
Thanks Chapeau . I've bought some of these acoustic-dampening soft rubber feet as an experiment, which seem to be effective in quietening down my desk a bit. They also raise the M1 nearly 1cm further off the desk (I've stuck them to the existing feet). I'm not convinced that they'll stick brilliantly but we'll see for now.

I've also decided to hang fire on adding any fans to the case floor as my 2070 seems to be running pretty cool as is: it's not gone above 77°C under load and even then the fans haven't been at more than about two-thirds speed. I'm sure that adding fans to the case floor would keep things even cooler and hopefully a little bit quieter, but it's quite acceptable so far. I'm really impressed with this 2070: it's fast as hell at 1200p, very cool and very, very quiet (below about 45% the fans are basically inaudible).
 
Does anyone have any suggestions for taller case feet? I'm thinking that I need a bit more clearance under the case to help with airflow, but I can't seem to find suitable replacement feet. I know the Lian Li SD-04B feet are a popular choice, but they don't seem to be available in the UK at present. I've seen people using hifi feet but these all seem to take an M4 screw and I'm fairly sure the standard NCase feet are secure with an M3 (and I don't fancy expanding the existing holes).

Recently purchased these feet: https://mnpctech.com/pc-computer-st...e-m1-custom-replacement-case-feet-silver.html

I'm regretting the purchase (haven't even opened the box, so they are brand new), and can sell them to you for $25 + shipping.
 
Thanks man, but as previously stated I'm in the UK so shipping isn't going to be economically viable!

Checked shipping rates and cheapest option is about $11 to UK. So if that's viable enough for you let me know. I can even include that as part of the price ($36, shipping included) so that you are secured, in case I end up actually paying more. That's same price as it costs new from MNPCTECH store (shipping discluded), and is a really good price ;-P
 
So I am finally back with some more testing. This time bottom exhaust vs bottom intake. I didn't have an Accelero GPU cooler to test with, but rather just used the stock cooler and took the shroud and fans off.

The interesting part is, that in therory it should yield lower CPU/mobo temps with the cost being higher GPU temps. But I could not provide such evidence with this setup.

The GPU connected fans was working harder in exhaust and still the GPU temps was higher (delta) but the CPU temps were not lower. So it seems it was only a trade off - no gain. My theory now lies with the fact I am using a AIO cooler and that it does not gain any of the heat from within the system as the airway is blocked off from the inside (ie it does not use the internal air as a cooling device), so only outside air is used to cool the CPU. And as such it does not yield lower temps for the CPU if the GPU is exhausting into the case or outside.

My data is to find here as always. Its the bottom data sheet and test #3, #4 and #5 that I am speeking about here.
 
Anyone know what all will be changing with the version 6? Need to order another m1
You'll have to wait a bit longer for a full list of changes. I've talked about of the few of them over on SFFN though if you want to follow the thread there.
 
You'll have to wait a bit longer for a full list of changes. I've talked about of the few of them over on SFFN though if you want to follow the thread there.
Appreciate you responding Necere!
Do we have a time table for the v6 to be orderable? (is oderable even a word?)
 
I wonder if a 3-slot 2080 Ti like the XC/XC2 Ultra would perform better in the M1 than a 2080 Ti with an Accelero. Does anyone know?
 
But how does it compare?^^
I did not find numbers comparing a 2.5 slot card with its fans removed vs. the same accelero modded card.
Both running the same fans.
 
But how does it compare?^^
I did not find numbers comparing a 2.5 slot card with its fans removed vs. the same accelero modded card.
Both running the same fans.

TLDR: Too many variables. Nobody has been willing to permanently damage their 2080ti in order to test without the fan brackets.

If you use an Asus or EVGA 2.75/2.7 slot card, you cannot fit a 25mm thick fan under them. 15mm max, the EVGA requires removing screws to get it to fit.
If you remove the shrouds, they have brackets soldered to the sink that will prevent the use of 25mm fans as exhaust. The Asus card can be used with 25mm fans as intake, barely. If you remove the brackets then you'll be the first that I know of, so please report back temps.
The Accelero allows the sink + 25mm thick fans. This is the gold standard currently.
The CPU cooler matters, as well as the CPU. That's why there aren't direct comparisons. If you use a C14S + TG then you will need the bottom fans as exhaust. 15mm intake fans on a fully shrouded 2080ti will result in horrible cpu temps.
If you use a U9S with 120mm side exhaust then the bottom intake fans might run better.
 
Okay, thanks for the information guys. Another question: How does the 645LT AIO compare to the U9S? Both heat exchangers are 92mm. The U9S has a larger heatsink, but the 645LT is liquid, so I'm thinking they're similar in performance? I want to finally get the window and I want to do Accelero intake on the bottom plus 645LT intake from the rear. That way the case will have positive pressure thru filtered intakes and all exhaust will be going out the top, which is good for dust control (which I actually value more than temperatures) and heat from the Accelero will not interfere with the CPU cooler because the latter will be getting fresh intake. And with the window, the AIO will look better. So that's my thought process, what do you think?
 
Okay, thanks for the information guys. Another question: How does the 645LT AIO compare to the U9S? Both heat exchangers are 92mm. The U9S has a larger heatsink, but the 645LT is liquid, so I'm thinking they're similar in performance? I want to finally get the window and I want to do Accelero intake on the bottom plus 645LT intake from the rear. That way the case will have positive pressure thru filtered intakes and all exhaust will be going out the top, which is good for dust control (which I actually value more than temperatures) and heat from the Accelero will not interfere with the CPU cooler because the latter will be getting fresh intake. And with the window, the AIO will look better. So that's my thought process, what do you think?

So just single 92mm (hopefully 25mm thick) fan intaking thru a radiator for the CPU...

And (assuming) dual 12x25s intaking thru a heat sink for the GPU...

But no chassis fan at all...? I forget if a SFX PSU can be used (with an adapter plate) in the forward position ATX PSU mount & still have the window...?

But if you CAN, then maybe mount another 12x25 fan exhausting up top, connected to the chassis fan header...

Maybe a custom bracket for the fan that attached to the ATX PSU mount...?

Might this bracket be possible, Necere ...?
 
So just single 92mm (hopefully 25mm thick) fan intaking thru a radiator for the CPU...

And (assuming) dual 12x25s intaking thru a heat sink for the GPU...

But no chassis fan at all...? I forget if a SFX PSU can be used (with an adapter plate) in the forward position ATX PSU mount & still have the window...?

But if you CAN, then maybe mount another 12x25 fan exhausting up top, connected to the chassis fan header...

Maybe a custom bracket for the fan that attached to the ATX PSU mount...?

Might this bracket be possible, Necere ...?

No, I actually asked this a while ago, you can't use the ATX bracket with the window. And yeah, 3 case intakes, and passive exhaust except the PSU which will be rotated inward, so it will provide additional exhaust. I have solid rubber plugs for the watercooling holes and a solid 3rd slot PCIe cover, so going for a chimney effect to ensure all intake is filtered and all exhaust is out the top to avoid dust settling in through there. The PSU may get a little loud, but I don't care that much about noise, I have a loud air purifier in my room (and an A/C in the summer), any fan in the PC spinning at under 2000 RPM is inaudible. And I don't tax my system that much. So it's all about dust management and looks, not about temperatures and noise. :D
 
No, I actually asked this a while ago, you can't use the ATX bracket with the window.

Hey Necere maybe a front mount bracket specifically for SFX PSUs, one that allows the window AND adds the ability to attach a single 120mm fan for exhaust out the top of the chassis...?

Another option for top exhaust, with the standard configuration of the SFX PSU alongside the motherboard, mounting four 80mm fans. two over the motherboard & two in front of the PSU...?

I'm gonna stop typing now... ;^p
 
Hey Necere maybe a front mount bracket specifically for SFX PSUs, one that allows the window AND adds the ability to attach a single 120mm fan for exhaust out the top of the chassis...?

Another option for top exhaust, with the standard configuration of the SFX PSU alongside the motherboard, mounting four 80mm fans. two over the motherboard & two in front of the PSU...?

I'm gonna stop typing now... ;^p
So for V6 I've redesigned the SFX bracket such that it can be installed either in the original side location, or at the front. It's not backward compatible with V5 though unfortunately, as it required some changes to the bracket and chassis to make it work in both locations. The ATX bracket will no longer be included.

As for additional fan mounts at the top, there really isn't enough room to make that work.
 
So for V6 I've redesigned the SFX bracket such that it can be installed either in the original side location, or at the front.
Do you mean that it can be rotated 90° so that it's behind the front panel and "across" the case? What is the advantage of that orientation compared to the standard "side mounted" one? Wouldn't it impinge on the clearance at the side panel?

Sorry if these are silly questions, but I'm trying to get my head round this and work out what benefit you'd get from having a little bit more space between the motherboard and PSU.
 
I'm trying to get my head round this and work out what benefit you'd get from having a little bit more space between the motherboard and PSU.
Most people that I’ve seen rotate their SFX psu to the “atx” position was to get a bit more room for the C14S’s bottom A14 fan. With the psu in the normal spot, the 140mm fan wouldn’t fit underneath the heatsink. The smaller SFX unit in the front position also creates a gap on the side panel where some additional air can enter/exhaust through the vent holes
 
Do you mean that it can be rotated 90° so that it's behind the front panel and "across" the case? What is the advantage of that orientation compared to the standard "side mounted" one? Wouldn't it impinge on the clearance at the side panel?

Sorry if these are silly questions, but I'm trying to get my head round this and work out what benefit you'd get from having a little bit more space between the motherboard and PSU.
Yeah, across the case. Basically what people were already doing using the ATX bracket.

Clearance for the bottom fan on the C14S is the main thing. There are also some microATX-ish motherboards that will benefit from it.
 
Yeah, across the case. Basically what people were already doing using the ATX bracket.

Clearance for the bottom fan on the C14S is the main thing. There are also some microATX-ish motherboards that will benefit from it.
Ah, thanks for clarifying. Makes sense, although it's a shame it breaks compatibility for such an edge case.
 
Any ideas how to repaint shallow cosmetic scratches in the NCASE’s paint? On a black case.

Also one of the expansion slot screw threads has stripped (seems common with Lian-Li aluminum) any idea if there is a way to repair that, or should i accept it and move on?
 
Any ideas how to repaint shallow cosmetic scratches in the NCASE’s paint? On a black case.

Also one of the expansion slot screw threads has stripped (seems common with Lian-Li aluminum) any idea if there is a way to repair that, or should i accept it and move on?
A black sharpie might be your best bet, to be honest. The case panels aren't painted, they're anodised, so touching them up is going to tricky.

In terms of the expansion slot, you could go for a nut & bolt solution rather than a screw.
 
Has anyone tried sandblasting the panels? Powder coating? Thinking of bringing it into a professional shop
 
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Any ideas how to repaint shallow cosmetic scratches in the NCASE’s paint? On a black case.

Also one of the expansion slot screw threads has stripped (seems common with Lian-Li aluminum) any idea if there is a way to repair that, or should i accept it and move on?

Probably just move on... :( There's not enough clearance or thickness for a proper repair;
1. Helicoil would be the standard for a stripped component like this that you can't tap
2. Small barrel nut like this would work if you had surrounding clearance
3. Sex nut and barrel bolt combo if you lack clearance, but getting one in a small enough diameter would be difficult
 
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Probably just move on... :( There's not enough clearance or thickness for a proper repair;
1. Helicoil would be the standard for a stripped component like this that you can't tap
2. Small barrel nut like this would work if you had surrounding clearance
3. Sex nut and barrel bolt combo if you lack clearance, but getting one in a small enough diameter would be difficult
If you know the size, digikey probably has it. or you can check your local hardware store (not Lowe's/HD, etc -- They may have it, but unlikely).
 
Just for anyone who is interested. I've created this M1 underdesk hanger

anyone are welcome to download and print em yourself.

link is on thingiverse 3655043

or click https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3655043


cheers.
 

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You are going to need at least the Ncase for this. DTX size and with the height of that DAC not going to fit in many SFF cases.

Imagine the Crosshair VIII Impact with a 240 AIO & a Navi version of this (a version which would actually fit in the M1, of course); maybe Necere is actually from the future & really designed the NCASE M1 for the ASUS ROG Crosshair VIII Impact...!?!
 
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