|  | May 22, 2008 The "GTA-PC" April 14, 2007 The "Digg" Case January 19, 2007 The "ITX-Laptop" December 07, 2006 The "Tortoise Beetle" October 02, 2006 The "DOS Head Unit" August 31, 2006 The "Janus Project" August 05, 2006 The "Leela PC" June 26, 2006 Nano-ITX in a Football May 17, 2006 The "EPIA Alloy Mod" April 11, 2006 Neatorama's Collection of Case Mods |
|  | | | February 18, 2006 The "Rundfunker" October 24, 2005 The "ITX TV" October 06, 2005 The K'nex-ITX August 05, 2005 The "Waffle Iron PC" July 21, 2005 The "Supra-Server" July 18, 2005 The "Mega-ITX" July 07, 2005 The "Encyclomedia" May 25, 2005 The "Accordion ITX" May 16, 2005 The "FileServerRouterSwitch" May 15, 2005 The "Mini Falcon" May 13, 2005 The "Bender PC" May 11, 2005 The "BBC ITX B" May 10, 2005 The "Frame" April 20, 2005 The "Jeannie" March 09, 2005 The "Cool Cube" January 30, 2005 First Nano-ITX Project? January 17, 2005 The "iGrill" January 15, 2005 The "Gumball PC" December 15, 2004 The "Deco Box" December 03, 2004 The "TERA-ITX" |
|  | | | October 06, 2004 The "Coealacanth-PC" September 17, 2004 The "Gramaphone-ITX-HD" August 26, 2004 The "C1541 Disk Drive ITX" August 25, 2004 The "SEGA-ITX" August 13, 2004 The "Quiet Cubid" August 06, 2004 The "BMWPC" July 14, 2004 The "Moo Cow Moo" July 02, 2004 The "Mini Mesh Box" June 17, 2004 Jukebox ITX May 24, 2004 The "ERN005PC" (KANA) March 13, 2004 The "Underwood No. 5" February 04, 2004 The "Humidor CL" January 23, 2004 The "Attache Server" January 22, 2004 "Racing The Light" January 21, 2004 VIA's Flat Panel DevKits January 20, 2004 The "Ambulator I" January 19, 2004 The "Borg Appliance" December 19, 2003 The Gingerbread Village Server December 04, 2003 Custom PC's XmasTreePC December 01, 2003 "Windows XP Box" Full alphabetical archive on right hand side of page... |
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The "Humidor II"
By Jeffrey
L. Stephenson - Posted on November 21, 2002
Tail end of PSU
brick being lifted up to clear cables then....
The 95W PSU comes
up and out then rests on the table without anything being
disconnected! The PSU has two 4-pin connectors and one floppy-style
connector.
Unfinished inside
interface opening. The height of the PSU opening is 3/4"
taller than it needs to be. This creates a "slot"
underneath the electrical box, which passes cables and air.
The motherboard is mounted sideways so that the cables have
to make an immediate right turn to exit out under the PSU.
This is what I
call the money shot. It shows the cabling and routing in detail.
The extra long wireless receiver cable was wound up and stowed.
Hard drive to the left. Tip of LED light at forefront of picture.
ThermalTake memory cooler to the right. I especially like
the mesh fit over the USB light. I didn't pull it all the
way past the bulb. Instead I left excess mesh around the light,
which creates a more subtle effect.
Back door shot. This has been my most challenging
design idea. A single rectangular cut in the back of a wooden
box, such as the size of this 75ct humidor, solved the problem.
It doesn't matter if the EPIA-M has a different connector
layout. It also allows me to pursue the umbilical style of
cable system management.
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