I remember trying to DIY something like this in 2017.. but then giving up because I couldn't find a strong enough mesh.. thankfully someone took the idea and made it a reality
All cases are meant for as pretty cable management as possible. I also wouldn't say it's a fault of the case you had to remove that RAM stick, sounds more like component choice issues, as in it should have been RAM with a low profile heat spreader, or used a different CPU cooler/AIO.
Should've gone with some speaker feet as part of your build to give the case additional height. As for the IO on the GPU, consider using angled cable extensions.
I have a full size psu and a 280 Corsair h115i with fans with no clearance issues at all. My 6800 barely cleared within a inch of hitting the bottom of the case.
There was some guy saying that his pcie riser cable kept melting bc of GPU, I'm kinda scared of putting my standard 750hx Corsair plat atx PSU with my ex 6800 tuf incase of pcie riser bmrlting
Given that it's mesh all around it's fair to say liquid cooling will serve you much better, as a lot of the airflow from the case fans just won't be directed anywhere near the heat sinks. Which means you probably want an SFX PSU for this as well.
I was really worried that the footage would need a lot of color work, but I think Sony has done a good job of balancing colors now, it made this video a lot easier just from the AF!
@@CoalitionGaming got the Sony a7 IV! The S5 wasn't able to be used by anyone else but me for family events, so I decided to return it and pay the higher amount. Got the Sigma 24-70 which is a beaut for what it is
lol, "it's all mesh, so we can probably get away with negative air pressure" what? You specifically need a more closed off case for negative pressure to work, it's all mesh, there's no pressure change because it's not a closed system. - the fans will need air, and it'll find the path of least resistance - the left side of the fans will suck air from the left side of the case, the cpu side, through the mesh on the left side - the right side of the fan will suck in the exhaust from the gpu - the GPU will suck air from right in front of it, which will be cool, coming from the mesh directly in front of the fans - the bottom fan will just take air from the bottom of the case Not like it won't work, like I said the GPU will take fresh air and the warm exhaust should dissipate, but it won't be creating negative pressure. It's like creating negative air pressure in an open bench, but not as extreme. If you want the fans to impact the GPU temps, prolly put 140s or the round Noctua 140s with 120 mounting, NFA14's (?). Bigger fan, quieter, bigger airflow, and put them as intake. The mesh nature of the case means you're not simply blasting the gpu exhaust air and trapping it in a vortex around the gpu. Ideally the air will universally flow across the case from front to back, with the gpu finstack throwing airat the fans from one side and at mesh on the other side. But two 140s will send that exhaust air all in one direction pretty easily and the GPU will draw cool air like before, but it wont sit and soak in its own heat. Plus the backside vram will be cooled actively (kinda).
You sound smart so basically help me with mine, I have the same case in black my mobo coming soon I'm going to order a thermalright low profile cooler and it's being paired with a standard 750hx Corsair plat atx PSU and a Rx 6800 tuf GPU. I have 2 noctua fans I'll hopefully install as well any tips on exhaust and intake.
If they can design a case like this with a ATX motherboard and a 4090 Founders Edition graphic card and a 360 radiator a power supply with a 220 length I'll like to buy something small instead of a big bulky case