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Designer could make 0.5cm or even 0.1cm wider and -all- cards would fit - now there will be never ending questions 'will this card fit ?' because nobody wants reference cards.Why it has been done -exactly- for 2 slots I have no idea.Such case -should- fit non reference cards for width because they offer much better cooling, clock and value.If it fits such card for length like Titan X or 980Ti it should fit non-reference for width.We are talking -most probably - about 10-30mm difference thats nothing.
Guys, I hate to keep spamming this question here, but since it's been brought up again -- would you recommend a reference or non-reference GPU for this case?
I see that Dan has only included reference cards in his recommendations and I'm wondering why.
Sorry a bit off topic but long time lurker, first time poster.
I am just wondering if dondan could tell me if a mATX board will fit in the A4 case?
I really want to configure an sli setup in the case but i am concerned about the heat.
@dondan, if necessary, could you change everything about the case so it suits my every requirement? (This question is based on the logic of someone like JFK78).![]()
I say it like that, but if it was possible to order and pay directly on the site, I would have already ordered and paid 2 to be on to have as soon as possible .... And I'm sure many would the same thing as me ....![]()
There were already some who offered that, and Dondan - the author of the case agreed on that. He will send you your new A4 case tomorrow if need be. You only need to pay 10,000 euro.
I'm torn between the Cryorig C7 and the Nocua NH-L9i for this case. Could someone give me pros and cons of both? I think the C7 performs better, but the Noctua is probably quieter and I also love the Noctua fan -- it's a standard 92mm fan, hence easier to replace, obviously Noctua brand which is the best fan there is, and also more appropriate for a case intake, which it will basically act as in this case, in addition to cooling the CPU. I think the Cryorig will deliver lower temps though, but since I don't plan on overclock, that won't matter all that much. Thoughts? What are you guys getting?
If only the filter part is against the cooler, I don't see an issue with it fitting but I have a bad feeling that the fan will be touching the filter.Oh you're right. I think the case's max cooler support is 48mm, so if the C7 is 47mm, it'll basically be sitting on the case wall. And I've just checked on DEMCiflex's website that their non-ferrous magnet filters are about 3mm thick, so I may not be able to use a filter with the C7 or I'll have a small bulge on the side... Never thought I'd ever be building in a case where the thickness of the dust filter would be an issue lol.
Sorry forgot to add it doesn't fit with my M.2 SSD. If the backplate was 2-3mm shorter, it would fit.
By the way, and this is duh, but Pascal GPUs are expected to be short, not much longer than 7-8 inches, similar to the R9 Fury X -- we may be looking at the end of the huge GPUs era, which makes it that much more imperative that a bracket is released for the case to utilize that space, for a vertical 3.5" drive, a 120mm radiator, or additional SSDs. Just a thought, but I know Dan has mentioned he would probably do that already.
I don't believe in this. Because they need space for huge coolers and power regulation for high end chips and I don't believe, that NVidia switch to water cooled gpus.
I think what we will see is a combination of more small options like the R9 Nano at the high end in addition to larger ones with current style heatsinks, where as before smaller options were more significantly underpowered compared to their larger siblings. Thus, I think that a bracket for an extra SSD/HDD or 120mm rad will be well appreciated by those that don't need the extreme performance of a 250-300W GPU, but are okay with a smaller 175W GPU design and want more storage or liquid cooling.
If only the filter part is against the cooler, I don't see an issue with it fitting but I have a bad feeling that the fan will be touching the filter.
With my M1 and DEMCiflex filter, it was touching the filter/fan but I added a 1.5mm thick washer and that fixed it, but that doesn't seem to be an option in the A4
I'd say the filter itself is 0.25mm or less. I'm just worried if the filter moves in at all from the pressure, it will touch the fan. I don't think there's any room or a place to put washers.100% Agreed!
I see what you're saying, it's 3mm at the magnet part, the filter is probably 1mm. Not sure how thick they are. Would you say yours is 1mm? I think the C7 fan's frame is slightly raised, so if the fan's frame hugs the filter, but the fins don't touch it, that would actually be ideal -- perfect intake from the outside directly onto the CPU. If not, then maybe we can try some thinner washers. I can live with a very slight bulge on the case.
Either way, I'm certainly going to wait for someone else to test this before I get a C7 haha. May have to go with the Noctua if it doesn't fit. I really want a filter.
I think the C7 fan's frame is slightly raised, so if the fan's frame hugs the filter, but the fins don't touch it, that would actually be ideal -- perfect intake from the outside directly onto the CPU.
All of the heatsinks I have seen on air-cooled RAM has fins/protrusions/something for the air to move around/over/thru to provide the cooling. The EK heatsinks are smooth, designed to transfer heat from the RAM to the water block. I just wonder how much efficiency they will have over RAM heatsinks designed for air-cooling as opposed to water-cooling
This is the RAM I intend to use in the HG Computers Osmi chassis:
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And a few more examples of air-cooled RAM heatsinks:
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