Ahanix D5 Media Center Enclosure
VL writes "Ahanix has delivered an enclosure that gives you everything you would desire in an HTPC. The versatility of using MicroATX or Standard ATX motherboards, the look and feel of high end audio/video equipment and a VFD information center that gives the added information of what is playing. It comes at a hefty price tag mind you, but in this particular situation, you get what you pay for." Now that's what I'm talking about. Anybody know of any other commercially available cases as well suited to putting in a stereo system?
My only problem with it is that it can only fit one hard-drive. I like my 500+ GB MythTV machine and it just wouldn't work in this case.
Considering the size and shape of hard-drives, you'd think they would add a couple mounting spots. They don't take much room and there's usually tons of empty space in these cases.
I hadn't considered assembling a HTPC before mainly due to cases (or lack of AV looking cases) and the fact that I have a ReplayTV. This case looks almost identical to my Denon receiver and Denon DVD players! Kudos to them, I may get one just to put my ReplayTV in! :)
-m
http://www.invisik.com
Compared to the standard SFF's out there, it does look good. Unfortunately, it looks better than most of my regular tv-top items; XBox (with Media Center), Cable Tivo, Directv Tivo, etc.
Heh, a blunder
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the Home Theater Personal Computer is no disease so rest assured you can breath again.
Now I understand the use of having a computer as part of your home entertainment system, and I see the merit in wanting it to "blend" with the rest of the objects in said entertainment setup.
Here's where I get a little fuzzy...
Am I the only one who just tossed their pc behind the entertainment center all together? With remote control (SSH/VNC/ATI Remote/Wireless Mouse) do you really need it sitting out and about?
As far as DVD goes, I already have a standalone player so there was no need to use the computer for dvd playback.
And as far as gaming goes, my gamecube with the wavebird suits me just fine.
So I guess I'm just wondering what this is useful for.
Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
As ever, Coolermaster make some very nice cases also with more reasonable (circa $100) price tags that would be suited to such a PC. Here and here are some links. You do, of course, still need to add a PSU to these cases.
Well... I've been busy finding such cases for the company I work for to build Media Center PCs... but personally, after seen, touched, feeled and used a lot of these cases, I can come only to one conclusion... Nothing beats my black 19" case media center
It's not completely quiet, but then I've got a Duron 1300 in there. AMD fans are loud. Liquid cooling would probably quiet the thing down, but that's more trouble than I want to go to. I'd really rather underclock a faster CPU to the point where I could use a fanless heat sink, but AMD's anti-overclocking also prevents underclocking.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
Other nice looking HTPC cases can be found at Silverstone http://www.silverstonetek.com/product-case.htm
I have been looking for a nice case to build a MythTV box in for some time now, and those few which are available and look good cost a lot - $100-200 at least. Too damn much.
Then the other day in cheap electronics shop I noticed number of new DVD players $30-$40 range(Xoro, Yakumo, shit like that). Nice cases. Should be possible to throw out the the original innards and build a pc into them. There would be few problems though, power supply and height - they are about 1U height. Perhaps somebody has already tried that and can share experience? Maybe some specific model is more suitable for conversion then others? (reuse PSU, drive, display panel?)
I have the Ahanix D4 which is similar but larger, and it is not all it is cracked up to be.
- I had to replace the "silent" power supply with a quieter one,
- the VFD software they ship is terrible,
- the build quality -- for anyone who owns actual high-end audio equipment -- is not actually that good,
- there is no dampening material in the case,
- getting the top off is near impossible and is bettered by other manufacturers, Ahanix esentially mackined a nice faceplate to put on a crappy old fashioned case,
- while the D4 says there is room for 5 total drives, I managed to get 3 in mine (partly because usinf an ATX board fills up on drive bay while other internal wires fill another),
- the front door just falls open rather than glideing smoothly (like would an actual high-end piece of equipment)
- the company lists it as shipping with 2 silent 80mm fans, instead it shipped with 1 loud 60mm fan
Anyhow, it works and it may be better than most things out there, but it is kind of crappy.
I opt for quality whenever possible. http://www.atechfabrication.com/. You do pay for the quality, but I figure this case will be with me for a long time. The company is basically a one man outfit, but the nice part is you can always send the case back for new modifications. Of course, I'm already salivating over the touch screen option which I didn't get...!
Not that I have any rack-mounted computers just yet ;)
;)
:) -- but from at least a few of the comments in this thread, looks may be the biggest thing it's got going. However, the "high end look" I'd prefer is that of Acoustic Research's amplifiers. Hmmm, looks like AR got bought out by Audiovox, so make that "the look of AR's amps circa 10 years ago." If stereo equipment -- and computers -- would just all be made with 19" rackmounting in mind, the world would be a brighter place, and children would never sing off key, and I would never sing at all, just in case.
I do like the look of some high-end stereo equipment -- in fact, the visual aesthetics are (I put forth as an idea) what gets a lot of people interested in that whole nutty domain. I'll concede otherwise when Stereophile is available only as an audio magazine delivered in a plain brown wrapper
This case doesn't look bad -- hard to go wrong with brushed metal and right angles
timothy
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