Overclock.net › Forums › Case Mods & Cases › Case Mod Work Logs › [Build Log] Corsair Obsidian 650D, 3770K, 2x GTX670, red/black theme
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

[Build Log] Corsair Obsidian 650D, 3770K, 2x GTX670, red/black theme

post #1 of 102
Thread Starter 
Introduction:
This is my second case mod, and I am doing it to make my sons jealous devil-smiley-019.gif and to challenge myself. It is a full 'balls out' mod from my perspective and I've tried to put together an absolutely premium system without getting into the tier of diminishing returns or being completely upside-down on the price to performance ratio. I normally buy somewhere around 3-4 items down from the latest, greatest. This time around I'm shooting more for a 2nd 'best'. An example, I am using the i7 3770K rather than the Extreme Series. I'm also using dual GTX 670 FTW in SLI rather than a GXT 690. In both of these examples, the price/performance ratio is just too out of whack for me to consider the top end products.

This will be my first use of custom loop water cooling. I plan to do a custom water droplet paint job on the sides in red and black... rather blood-like... hence the project name of Bloody Awesome. This will be carried through the red and black colors throughout. I will do some level of modification of the sheet metal, custom window and likely some metal fabrication. I tend to be a perfectionist. I just need to ensure I stay patient with this build so I don't overrun my learning curve. wink.gif I have done some basic sleeving and am pretty good at cable management, but I will be sleeving everything and it must be perfect... just because.

I expect this build to take me about 4-8 weeks longer than I expected wink.gif, depending upon how much free time I get and clearing out some space in my garage. I have a decent system already, so no major rush there.





Latest Updates:
1/6 - I picked up two more fans from MicroCenter.. and made sure they were red. I also worked on making the cables behind the motherboard tray tidy. But who is going to see that? You will in the pictures I post when it's done. biggrin.gif


Index:
First Picture Set (unboxed parts)
5 1/4" Drive cage mod
Front cutout and filler plate
Front filler plate - take 2
Front fascia sanding and paint work
Top Fan Housing
Top Fan Housing 2
Case frame re-assembled
GPU water block install, Side window cutting and painting
Power Supply Cabling and Sleeving


Current State 01/06/2013):
8356296490_a476272ce6_c.jpg
Finished 24-pin Extension by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr
8356358834_bfa66c76a1_c.jpg
24-pin cable at motherboard by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr

What is left to do:
  • Buff side panels
  • Install acrylic in window
  • Cut fan cables, re-crimp ends, sleeve x8
  • Make cable for fan controller to distribution block & sleeve x2
  • Sleeve front panel connection cables (including USB3)
  • Install front panel and route
  • Install fan controller
  • Install radiators and fans (and connect)
  • Install bottom drive cage and HDDs
  • Mount SSD on back side of tray
  • Sleeve SATA cables
  • Mount pump
  • Install CPU waterblock
  • Form water lines
  • Pressure test system
  • Cover I/O connections on motherboard
  • Cover label on power supply
  • Final dusting and tidy
  • Take final pictures and call it done
  • Drink moar beer biggrin.gif


Older Updates:
1/5 - Well, I slept with my jeans on, three shirts, two blankets, etc... I slept until 10:00AM. But, the fever is gone and I am feeling beter. My wife is amazed at how I do that. For me it seems better to cook whatever bug is bothering me out of my system. ;-)
I took some pictures and started working on the fans. I figured out the lengths of each fan lead. Each radiator setup will go to a 4:1 junction block, and like everything else, I want the cables to be just the right length. I marked the locations of each fan on some temporary labels made of duct tape. I then decided I should probably test each of the fans just to make sure I didn't end up with a factory defect.. and I am glad that I did. Two of the eight fans were friggin GREEN. ***?!? They were packaged as red. Well, better to find it now than after the cables were done and everythign was installed I suppose.
1/4 - I figured out the wires I got crossed last night by using my multi-meter and jumpering the PSU so it would turn on. All is good now. I also finished the sleeving on the main power cable and knocked out the CPU power cable(s) as well. Counting last night, that is 12 hours of cable work. My eyes are crossed, my fingers burned and cut... and I'm not feeling well. I have a fever. I think I will go sweat it out in bed... at 8:00PM... sheezzz
1/4 - OK, I am pissed. I had hoped to complete this thing before the end of the year... but life got in the way. It seems that our household has dealt with every illness possible in the past month. Hopefully we are all on the mend. I decided to work on the power supply cable tonight. I spent about 3 hours making an extension cable for the 24-pin cable. I did this because I realized that the Seasonic has multiple splices and twists which are not conducive to a nice clean linear pattern. So.. the transitions will be made between the extension and the main cable. This will also allow me to and up with the length I want on the back side of the motherboard tray.
I started working on the main power cable as well. I made it about 2/3 of the way through and started making mistakes. I will have to get my multi-meter out and verify where what ended up. I am going to go get some sleep before I make more mistakes. I think five hours working on cables is enough.
12/4 - I finished the PCI-E cables. I had enough time after watching The Voice to knock the second set out. ;-) ps.. I'm pissed that Amanda Brown went home.
12/2 - I have been dreading this. Building my own cables and sleeving them. It sounds simple. It is very time consuming... and I have never done it. Well, I have now. First off, big thanks to Lutr0 for his guides and videos and to Nils at MDPC for his product and tools. You both made it much easier! One gotcha that I am not thrilled with, but will accept... EVGA power connectors are facing each other. In other words, they force a twist. Also, my power supply connectors are kind of inverted as well. I can't make a perfectly straight cable, and even if I did, it would be twisted when installed anyway. So, I had to get a little creative with my accent colors, etc. All in all, it turned out pretty well.
11/25 - I have put probably 6 coats of clear on the panels and have wet sanded. I had to touch up a couple of spots that I sanded through, but nobody will be able to tell. wink.gif I think I will do a couple more coats and wet sand once more before I buff it out.
11/18 - Candy apple red is done. Wow.. it looks sweet! Very happy.
11/17 - OK.. now the fun begins. I pulled the effect off pretty well using rattle cans! I used a heavy coat of silver paint on top of the black... and used dry cleaning bags as my texture. If it were any warmer (around 80) it would not have worked. The rattle can paint evaporates dry very fast. Now I need to wait a day and put the candy apple red on.
11/11 - I finished sanding the panels and put a coat of gloss black on them. This will be the base coat for the red marble finish. smile.gif
11/10 - I finished cutting the window out. This involved using a hole saw for the corners and reinforced cutoff wheel in the Dremel for the straights. I also used a flat file and sanding drums to finish it out.
11/4 - I have been putting off the side window. Well, that is only partially true. I actually ordered one from a good seller on eBay. I got a .25 inch thick cast acrylic piece cut specifically to use some channel molding from Grainger. Yes, I have a 50' box of molding that I'm not going to use. It is a good product. It is designed to use with the thickness material I am using and is professional looking, etc. Oh.. and it was expensive. However, it doesn't work well with tight radius corners and it is quite large. I think the big black strip would be ugly. So... I ordered another window and started cutting tonight. I'm going to extend the factory window across to make it symmetric. Lots of cutting and grinding.
10/18 - I decided to break the system down. No more Folding@Home for a while. This allowed me to install the EK water blocks on the GPUs. The worst part of this was the friggin thermal transfer tape. Getting the backing off of that crap was a complete pain. I also had to buy some expensive screws to be able to install the water block AND use the backer plate I got from EVGA. I spent around $16 on tiny screws. *sigh* But.. it looks great.
10/1 - I spent the weekend two weeks ago in Arkansas with my son and didn't get to work on the case at all. This past weekend I volunteered at a charity event on Saturday and again, didn't get much time to work on the case. I did at least manage to get the front insert riveted into place on the front panel and shot it with a couple of coats of gloss black.
Today my daughter has the flu and has been throwing up most of the day. *yuck* But, between caring for her and answering emails at work, I did manage to reassemble the main frame of the case. It looks like something again! biggrin.gif
9/23 - I had other things come up and couldn't work on the system for a couple of weeks. I finally painted the top panel with some Hammered Finish in black. I was not happy with it. So... I sanded it all off. I then tried satin black, and wasn't happy with it either. Rinse and repeat. So... finally, I found some black textured paint that really matches the factory finish well. So.. there was two weeks spent painting, sanding, painting, sanding, etc. *sigh*... but at least it ended up like I wanted.
8/26 - I made a template to cut out the fan grill on the top panel of the corsair case. I also took all of the rivets out, so the only thing left intact on the original case is the motherboard tray, back and bottom panels. It doesn't look like much sitting there by itself. LOL I made the template out of a Diet Dr. Pepper 24-pack wrapper that was laying around in the garage. Make use of what is available!
After disassembling the case further, I taped the template in place and marked the opening using a fine sharpie. I then followed these lines with masking tape to protect the paint and to give me a visible guide line. I used a Dremel reinforced cut-off disc (ok, it took 3) to cut out the opening. I then used the drum sander on the Dremel to round the corners. The housing was then attached using black silicone and allowed to cure for a day.
I then filled the imperfections on the housing with bondo, primed and painted. The inside got a coat of gloss black. The outside received coats of hammered black finish. It will have to sit for several days before I am ready to move it or take pictures. I want to make sure it is cured fully.
8/24 - The past three days have been consumed with making the top fan housing. I built it out of 16ga steel sheet metal. This is about as thin as I can possibly weld with my stick arc welder. I did all of the cutting, but in the interest of time, I did go to a local sheet metal company to have them do the bends for me. I had bought enough angle iron to make my own jigs, but I would have spend an entire day building them, just to use them once. In the end, the guy only wanted $5, but I paid him more because it saved me several hours. smile.gif Drilling fan holes with a hole saw in 16ga steel takes a while. I had to throw my drill in the fridge a couple of times to cool it off. ;-)
8/19 - I spent some time perfecting my belt sanding technique. Not too fast, not too slow. Too fast and there is too much heat, which results in barbs on the surface of the aluminum. I can't exactly smooth them down with sandpaper because I would loose the brushed metal sheen. Next up I also figured out the right timing on primer, chrome paint and candy apple red top coats. The results are pretty nice. I also really like the candy apple red over the brushed aluminum. It looks nice, but the sheen isn't really picked up well with the camera. That's it for a couple of days. I will be taking a few days vacation later this week and hope to make some serious progress.
8/18 - *sigh* ... I just spent the first 4 hours today remaking the front panel. I cut the fan holes too big the first time. At least the panel came out better overall than the first time.. and I re-learned the measure twice, cut once principle. smile.gif
8/14 - I started on the front panel. I cut a section of 22 gauge sheet metal to serve as the filler panel/mounting panel for the front radiator and fans. I also cut out the existing panel to be much taller and to remove the restrictive grill.
8/12 - I have received all of the parts needed to build and have attacked! The 5 1/4" drive cage is the first item to undergo the knife (or angle grinder wink.gif ) See the index below for a direct link to the latest post.
8/3 - I've received most of the major parts and have started taking pictures of all of the goodies. I uploaded new pics and updated the index below.
7/28 - After reading through MANY messages and threads here on plasticizer problems, clouding, etc. I decided to go with Durelene tubing and just ordered 25ft from Sidewinder. I also have spent a lot of time reading tutorials and opinions on sleeving and decided to go with MDPC-X. I'll be ordering a black kit and some small red for accent. I'm loving the wealth of info here at OCN!


Parts List:
1 - Corsair Obsidian Series 650D CC650DW-1 (Received)
1 - SeaSonic X-SERIES X-1050 SS-1050XM (Received)
1 - Intel i7 3770k BX80637I73770K (Received)
1 - Asus ROG Maximus V Gene (Received)
2 - EVGA GeForce GTX 670 FTW 02G-P4-2678-KR (Received)
1 - CorsairVengeance 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 1866 CMZ16GX3M4X1866C9R (Received)
2 - Western Digital Caviar Black WD1002FAEX 1TB (Received)
1 - Plextor M3 Pro Series 2.5" 256GB SATA PX-256M3P (Received)
1 - LG BDXL Quad-Layer Blu-Ray Burner WH14NS40 (Received)
2 - EK GTX Nickel CSQ GPU Waterblock EK-FC680 (Received)
1 - EK FC Bridge Dual Parallel CSQ (Received)
1 - EK Supremacy Nickel CPU Waterblock (Received)
1 - Koolance Reservoir Base COV-RP450 (Received)
1 - REX X2 200mm Reservoir Tube (Received)
1 - Swiftech Pump MCP655-B (Received)
2 - Black Ice Extreme II Dual 120mm Radiator (Received)
1 - Lamptron Fan Controller FC-FC9B (Received)
6 - Cooler Master SickleFlow 120mm Red LED Fans (Received)
1 - Cooler Master MegaFlow 200mm Red LED Fan (Received)
1 - Windows 7 Ultimate (Received)
1 - Samsung SynchMaster 244T (Received)
1 - Samsung SynchMaster 205BW (Received)
1 - Coolermaster Storm Trigger Keyboard SGK-6000-GKCM1 (Received)
25 - Durelene PVC tubing 3/8in. ID 5/8in. OD by Saint-Gobain (Received)
1 - MDPC starter cable sleeve / heat shrink tubing set (Received)
1 - MDPC small red sleeving and red heat shrink (Received)
50 - MDPC black dome head rivets (Received)
12 - Danger Den straight 1/2" barb fittings, chrome (Received)
1 - Mayhems X1 UV Red dye - 1L premix (Received)
1 - Mayhems 10ml Red dye concentrate (Received)
1 - Rustoleum Red (Received)
1 - Rustoleum White (Received)
1 - Rustoleum Black (Received)
1 - Rustoleum Chrome (Received)
3 - Candy Red (Received)
Edited by n3farious - 1/7/13 at 7:44am
post #2 of 102
Thread Starter 
{reserved for if I get overly wordy in the main post wink.gif }
Edited by n3farious - 7/27/12 at 10:51pm
post #3 of 102
Thread Starter 
Well, I ordered my sleeving today from MDPC-X. What a strange experience. If I didn't know what to expect up front, I would have been nervous. I'm not used to a site that is open for an hour or so at a time. biggrin.gif

I ended up going with the black kit and then a 10m supply of small red and red heat shrink. The outside of the case is still being planned out, but the inside will be mostly black with red accents. In keeping with that, the main power lead will be done like: (Forgive the ASCII representation rolleyes.gif)

||||||||||||
||||||||||||
||||||||||||
||||||||||||
||||||||||||


And the Video Power:

||||
||||
||||
||||
||||
ORDER DETAILS (Click to show)
Order Items
Product = MDPC Sleeve-Kit
Quantity = 1
SKU = SL-K1-BK
Price = 36,47 €

Product = Sleeve SMALL - RED
Quantity = 1
SKU = SL-S-RE
Price = 8,00 €

Product = Heatshrink SMALL - RED
Quantity = 1
SKU = HS-S-RE
Price = 2,69 €

Product = Rivet Dome Head - BLACK
Quantity = 1
SKU = RI-ST-BK
Price = 5,00 €

I will start taking pictures of the pile of supplies later in the week once my last NewEgg order and the FrozenPC orders arrive.

Cheers!
-n3f
post #4 of 102
Thread Starter 
Here are some pictures after unboxing a bunch of stuff. Enjoy the hardware pr0n. biggrin.gif



Asus ROG Maximus V Gene by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Asus ROG Maximus V Gene by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Corsair Vengeance RAM by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Plextor SSD Drive by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Plextor SSD Drive by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Tubing by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


LG BDXL Quad-Layer Blu-Ray Burner by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Intel i7 3770k by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Intel i7 3770k back by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Western Digital Caviar Black 1TB HDD by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Lamptron Fan Controller by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Lamptron Fan Controller back by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


EVGA GeForce GTX670 backplate by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


Reservoir and Pump by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


EK Supremacy Nickel CPU Block by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


EK FC Bridge Dual Parallel by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr
(This is still in the plastic because I might replace it with the clear plexi version if they have it ready in two weeks as they claim)


Black Ice Radiator by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


EK GTX Nickel CSQ GPU Block by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr


EK GTX Nickel CSQ GPU Block back by Satterwhite.C, on Flickr
Edited by n3farious - 12/4/12 at 12:55pm
post #5 of 102
It really makes me jealous when I see these build logs. I already know that your build is going to be awesome. I need to finish school so I can do a liquid cooled project. I will be following this.
post #6 of 102
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Curious Andre View Post

It really makes me jealous when I see these build logs. I already know that your build is going to be awesome. I need to finish school so I can do a liquid cooled project. I will be following this.

Heh, thanks for the vote of confidence. Don't worry, there's no way I could have done something like this a few years back both due to time and money. Keep your priorities correct and the good stuff will come to you. thumb.gif
post #7 of 102
Looking forward to the build. I also have sli'ed 670's in a C650D.
A few common thoughts on the case - change the fans (you already did, Good!) and consider cutting out the mesh in the front (pointless restriction).

Enjoy! thumb.gif
Edited by Fan o' water - 8/3/12 at 9:18pm
Mild Mod
(16 items)
 
  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7-2600k 4.5GHz @1.32v Asus Sabertooth P67 GTX 670 in SLI ( EK Supreme HF uni blocks and c... 16Gb Gskill Trident X @2133 
Hard DriveOptical DriveCoolingOS
2 SSD's, 2 Cav Blacks Asus Danger Den cpu wb, HWLabs 280mm SR-1 and GTX12... W7 64 Pro 
MonitorKeyboardPowerCase
Dell u3011  Razer BlackWidow Ultimate Corsair AX850 Corsair 650d Modded 
MouseAudioAudio
MS laser wireless Creative 5.1 setup Creative Soundblaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
Mild Mod
(16 items)
 
  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7-2600k 4.5GHz @1.32v Asus Sabertooth P67 GTX 670 in SLI ( EK Supreme HF uni blocks and c... 16Gb Gskill Trident X @2133 
Hard DriveOptical DriveCoolingOS
2 SSD's, 2 Cav Blacks Asus Danger Den cpu wb, HWLabs 280mm SR-1 and GTX12... W7 64 Pro 
MonitorKeyboardPowerCase
Dell u3011  Razer BlackWidow Ultimate Corsair AX850 Corsair 650d Modded 
MouseAudioAudio
MS laser wireless Creative 5.1 setup Creative Soundblaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
post #8 of 102
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fan o' water View Post

Looking forward to the build. I also have sli'ed 670's in a C650D.
A few common thoughts on the case - change the fans (you already did, Good!) and consider cutting out the mesh in the front (pointless restriction).
Enjoy! thumb.gif

Thanks for the ideas/pointers. I checked out your build and have to say that it is well executed. smile.gif Did you make the fan panel for the top of your case?

Yeah, the front mesh will be cut out.. and the bottom will be enlarged with the PSU mounted to pull in from the bottom. I should have gotten the 800, but don't like monster cases. With some improvements, this case will be fine. smile.gif
post #9 of 102
Quote:
Originally Posted by n3farious View Post

Thanks for the ideas/pointers. I checked out your build and have to say that it is well executed. smile.gif Did you make the fan panel for the top of your case?
Yeah, the front mesh will be cut out.. and the bottom will be enlarged with the PSU mounted to pull in from the bottom. I should have gotten the 800, but don't like monster cases. With some improvements, this case will be fine. smile.gif

Thanks. I did make it. I also made the false front with the grill and dust filter. I need to update the isometric shot. That shot predates the CoolerMaster Megaflow.
I had originally wanted to mount fans on the bottom and close off the front, but the case just wasn't big enough.
It is a good size, just have to plan carefully. I am working out the kinks in a custom reservoir design. We'll see..
Mild Mod
(16 items)
 
  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7-2600k 4.5GHz @1.32v Asus Sabertooth P67 GTX 670 in SLI ( EK Supreme HF uni blocks and c... 16Gb Gskill Trident X @2133 
Hard DriveOptical DriveCoolingOS
2 SSD's, 2 Cav Blacks Asus Danger Den cpu wb, HWLabs 280mm SR-1 and GTX12... W7 64 Pro 
MonitorKeyboardPowerCase
Dell u3011  Razer BlackWidow Ultimate Corsair AX850 Corsair 650d Modded 
MouseAudioAudio
MS laser wireless Creative 5.1 setup Creative Soundblaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
Mild Mod
(16 items)
 
  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7-2600k 4.5GHz @1.32v Asus Sabertooth P67 GTX 670 in SLI ( EK Supreme HF uni blocks and c... 16Gb Gskill Trident X @2133 
Hard DriveOptical DriveCoolingOS
2 SSD's, 2 Cav Blacks Asus Danger Den cpu wb, HWLabs 280mm SR-1 and GTX12... W7 64 Pro 
MonitorKeyboardPowerCase
Dell u3011  Razer BlackWidow Ultimate Corsair AX850 Corsair 650d Modded 
MouseAudioAudio
MS laser wireless Creative 5.1 setup Creative Soundblaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
post #10 of 102
Those images are gorgious, I can't wait to see more!
Big Green
(27 items)
 
Vanilla Cherries
(21 items)
 
Memories
(12 items)
 
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7 3820 Gigabyte G1.Assassin EVGA GTX680 4GB 16GB (8 x 2GB) Mushkin Enhanced BLackline 
Hard DriveHard DriveHard DriveOptical Drive
Samsung 830 128GB Samsung 830 256GB Plextor M5 512GB N/A 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC Raystorm EK FC680 Coppter + Acetal XSPC EX360 XSPC RX240 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC Dual Bay D5 res D5 XSPC Green Coolermaster Sickle Flows 
OSMonitorKeyboardPower
Windows 7 Ultimate Dell U23.5" Ducky Shine II TKL Seasonic 660w 
CaseMouseMouse PadAudio
Bitfenix Shinobi XL Mionix NAOS 5000 Mionix Propus Sennhesier HD280 
OtherOther
MDPC green + black sleeving NZXT White LED sleeve  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7 2500k ASUS Maximus IV Extreme Sapphire 7970 Dual X (11197-01-40G) 16GB Corsair Dominators 
Hard DriveHard DriveHard DriveCooling
Plextor M3 Corsair Force GT 120GB Plextor M3 EK Supreme HF Copper + Acetal 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
Dual PMP400s + EK Dual DDC V2 EK Dominator X4 EK FC7970 Copper + Acetal XSPC EX120 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC EX240x2 Yate Loon Medium Speeds (painted) Monsoon compression fittings XSPC white tubes 
CoolingOSPowerCase
FrozenQ Helix Bay Res  Windows 7 Ultimate NZXT HALE90-1000-M NZXT Phantom  
Audio
Creative Sound Blaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
Big Green
(27 items)
 
Vanilla Cherries
(21 items)
 
Memories
(12 items)
 
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7 3820 Gigabyte G1.Assassin EVGA GTX680 4GB 16GB (8 x 2GB) Mushkin Enhanced BLackline 
Hard DriveHard DriveHard DriveOptical Drive
Samsung 830 128GB Samsung 830 256GB Plextor M5 512GB N/A 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC Raystorm EK FC680 Coppter + Acetal XSPC EX360 XSPC RX240 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC Dual Bay D5 res D5 XSPC Green Coolermaster Sickle Flows 
OSMonitorKeyboardPower
Windows 7 Ultimate Dell U23.5" Ducky Shine II TKL Seasonic 660w 
CaseMouseMouse PadAudio
Bitfenix Shinobi XL Mionix NAOS 5000 Mionix Propus Sennhesier HD280 
OtherOther
MDPC green + black sleeving NZXT White LED sleeve  
CPUMotherboardGraphicsRAM
i7 2500k ASUS Maximus IV Extreme Sapphire 7970 Dual X (11197-01-40G) 16GB Corsair Dominators 
Hard DriveHard DriveHard DriveCooling
Plextor M3 Corsair Force GT 120GB Plextor M3 EK Supreme HF Copper + Acetal 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
Dual PMP400s + EK Dual DDC V2 EK Dominator X4 EK FC7970 Copper + Acetal XSPC EX120 
CoolingCoolingCoolingCooling
XSPC EX240x2 Yate Loon Medium Speeds (painted) Monsoon compression fittings XSPC white tubes 
CoolingOSPowerCase
FrozenQ Helix Bay Res  Windows 7 Ultimate NZXT HALE90-1000-M NZXT Phantom  
Audio
Creative Sound Blaster Z 
  hide details  
Reply
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Case Mod Work Logs
Overclock.net › Forums › Case Mods & Cases › Case Mod Work Logs › [Build Log] Corsair Obsidian 650D, 3770K, 2x GTX670, red/black theme