Lots of Alienwares.

Right now the vents are stuck open (they were up when the motherboard died :lol: ) so I can't put them down. What's annoying is the front door is also stuck shut until I can power it on again so I couldn't get any pics of my SSD raid box or my SSDs :(

Hold on, the front door and top vents are electric and controlled by the PC, or have
I misunderstood something?
 
I loved that case the first time I had seen it. If alienware (dell) didn't have silly business practices I probably would have bought one. I have no problem with the alienware look or cases. I just didnt like how they offered "high end" systems with underpower itx boards (more recent years). Im glad someone to see someone doing some sweet builds in one though
 
Hold on, the front door and top vents are electric and controlled by the PC, or have
I misunderstood something?

Yeah. The front door is completely electronic and works like so (ignore the noise it hadn't been opened for over a year before I got it)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DS0mnrt7YTU&list=UURAjB0mPRjMLWXrzhqwo-bg&index=2

I've oiled it since with some WD40. I could wire the PSU to start using a piece of wire over the green and ground but I CBA.

The vents are set up (they have their own programmable ROM) to flare at start (so open and close twice before opening completely) and then by temperature in Windows. Sadly when the board died they were up so I've covered up the top of the PC with a sheet to stop it filling with dust :)
 
There was one on Ebay the other day. It went for £74. All it needed was a new control board.

Mind you I say that but buying the control board from Dell would run you an eye watering £200 :O

You can usually find them on Ebay USA for around £35 ish.

I gotta say I am tempted to get another one and rip it down and powdercoat the internals.
 
I'm still unsure, I have this for the minute until I make my mind up, Modded a little though :)

silverstone-raven-rv01-cote_zps74484bcd.jpg


RV01B-Insidstucture_zpsa95d1e2f.jpg


2_zpsa0a54e97.jpg


P.S It's freakin huge :p
 
Yeah. The front door is completely electronic and works like so (ignore the noise it hadn't been opened for over a year before I got it)

[...video...]

I've oiled it since with some WD40. I could wire the PSU to start using a piece of wire over the green and ground but I CBA.

The vents are set up (they have their own programmable ROM) to flare at start (so open and close twice before opening completely) and then by temperature in Windows. Sadly when the board died they were up so I've covered up the top of the PC with a sheet to stop it filling with dust :)

Holy crap, that's awesome, especially for a mechanics fetishist like myself! :) :rock:
 
I'll take some more photos today of all of the gadgets and electronics guys :)

It definitely goes a long way to explain why these things cost what they did tbh.
 
Right I got some pictures for you guys :)

Firstly though I noticed something really really strange last night when moving the rad. When I took out the rad mount (I'll explain that bit in a moment) I noticed that on it there was a manufacture date of October 24 2008. It took a while for that to register but then I realised that the Area 51 "Dellienware" wasn't even released until at the very earliest December 09 but it could have even been as late as March 2010.

Very odd that, seems they were getting things ready long before they announced these machines !

OK so I got a load of pics to show around the case a bit.

Firstly hidden in the side of the cover duct is a set of rechargeable batteries.



These are to power on the case lights. Not the ones you thought, but the case has a ton of white LEDs dotted around to help you see what you're doing. For example here is the rear IO of the case. If you look closely you can see a small black button. Press it and the entire rear IO lights up so you can see what you're plugging in :)



There's also a ton of LEDs inside the case that are controlled by a door switch. So as soon as you open the case the inside lights up white :)

Here is the right side hard drive bay. It takes six full sized HDDs.



And it is cooled by this.



The outer rails are ducts and the fan disperses air over each hard drive.

Then the main duct fan is here. Was only when I took a pic of it that I realised how dirty it was so I'll remove it today and clean it all :)



That one is a 24v Delta capable of taking your fingers off :lol: thankfully it's fully controllable in Windows otherwise it makes a right old racket :D

This here is the main control board. This is the board responsible for pretty much everything (hard drive cooling, lights, vents, front door ETC)



And at the top of the case built onto the radiator mount is another control board that controls the pump, fans and so on.



Here is the radiator mount that swings down when you pull the lever. It takes a triple rad.



Here is how you remove the radiator mount. You just press in the white part and it swings down on hinges.



Then we have the door. It is a triple walled construction with the outler layer being 1/8 aluminium then a plastic layer to stop it vibrating and then a steel frame.



And at the other end is a set of weird hinges that allow you to either just swing it open for maintenance or remove it completely for building.



So that's pretty much the insides. In fairness to Dell back in 08 when they designed this (and tbh it could even have been designed way earlier) black insides and cable holes were still in their infancy. It was only in and around 2010 that it became a standard.

Either way there's no window and so much going on to play with on the outside that I don't care :lol:

I'll get a load more pics showing what the outside stuff can do once she's rebuilt.

Update. Just ordered a pair of these.



And one of these.



So that's the rad cooling sorted :)
 
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Man, that is actually quite a bit of engineering for a mere computer case, must admit. Personally,
the design is a bit too out there for me, but that's just a matter of taste and doesn't take away
from the engineering bit imho. :)
 
Man, that is actually quite a bit of engineering for a mere computer case, must admit. Personally,
the design is a bit too out there for me, but that's just a matter of taste and doesn't take away
from the engineering bit imho. :)

Yeah it's a serious amount of toys tbh. It's kind of an Area 51 ALX Predator 2.1 meets Dell XPS 7xx series.

I just took out the front duct fan for a good cleaning. God it was filthy and I never really noticed how bad it was before. I also had some work to do rewiring because the board I used to use only had 2 usable SATA ports as the others were blocked by the GPU so I was using USB 2 - SATA converters for my data drives. I just removed those and re-routed the cables back for SATA :)

Before that though here's a pic of the main IO board out of the case.



It's about 6" x 3.5" in size so there's plenty going on haha.

Here's the case with the fan removed. I'm going to do something about the wires down there, might make a false floor out of acrylic.



Fan.



Seriously beefy.. Here's all the parts cleaned.



And reassembled :)

 
Update :D

The postman came and brought me the fans and fan splitter I had ordered.

I was really pleased because they came from different sellers and I was worried that I'd have to sit and look at the fans for a few days without being able to do anything. My lady went out to get her hair cut so I got dug in :D She doesn't like me fiddling with the computer when she's here because I make a right mess. I do tidy it up though :D

Any way, here is what I ordered. A couple of F12s and a fan splitter.



Cost? £9 all in delivered. I've used these fans in many of my rigs in the past and they're excellent tbh. The only complaint I could possibly have @ £3.60 each delivered is how thin the fan wires are. But let's face it as long as you're careful and they're well hidden it doesn't really matter.

Couple of shots of the fans.





And it was time to remove the rear 92mm fan and remove the radiator 'sled'.



Here is IO board two and it controls everything at this end.



So I fitted the fans in push pull with the airflow going upward. The rear fan on the case (which is not fitted and is optional) has been switched to bring in air for the rad to take up through the roof. This is what I was referring to with the vents on the Area 51 they most certainly do make a difference unlike the Aurora.



As you can see the wires do leave a lot to be desired. However I did quite a good job of making it as tidy as possible. Nice and basic, one cable tie took care of it :)



And it was time to put it back :)



Til next time :)

Just hot wired the PSU and let the vents do their flare. Ignore the horrible whirring sound I can't control the 92mm until I'm back in Windows.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xV_GlWaFw4&feature=youtu.be
 
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Man, that vent opening/closing action looks pretty smooth, effin' neat! :)

Also, +1 for the new Avatar (it's new right? It's not that I've been overlooking it for weeks or
something like that? :lol: ), looks good!
 
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