Hello everybody,

I recently purchased some parts for my first homeserver, but I am not really happy with the case, because it just a tremendous waste of space.

I am running an ASRock N100M micro-ATX with two Sata SSDs and one PCIe x1 NIC and Pico PSU to power it. So I am looking for a minimal/small case to fit exactly this.

What I find usually has no accommodation for PCIe cards, or wastes 50% of its space for a full ATX PSU and an optical drive tray… or it just cost more then the whole PC together. Since it is such a minimal setup I am hoping to pay the lower end of case prices (~30-50euro).

Does somebody here has an idea?

Best wishes

  • @[email protected]
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    41 month ago

    Look into PICO PSU. Its a small powersupply that uses a power brick to downsize internals. It’s used by homelabbers sometimes.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 month ago

    ETA Prime on YT has a bunch of SFF builds. Not sure if any of them have external PSUs but it’s a good place to start.

  • @69420
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    21 month ago

    It has space for a standard PSU inside, but I’m pretty happy with this one:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0785GRMPG

    I’ve been running it for about 4 years now.

    If you have a fat GPU, you might have trouble with additional PCIe cards. You’ll definitely need more cooling as it only comes with one tiny fan.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      21 month ago

      I really like the idea, but for my purpose an open case is a no-go. It’s for my Homeserver and I have two hyper active cats ;) but I was already thinking to get some kind of skeleton like this and put someone around. Is this applicable for micro ATX Mainboards?

      • @anticonnor
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        01 month ago

        I feel ya. I have a dog and three cats, but so far have not had an issue with hair or cable chewing. The frame is essentially just a kit of 2020 extruded aluminum t-slot rails with connectors. If I were to do this again, I would probably not go with a kit and instead just buy the rails and connectors I need for my specific motherboard/components. Also, any extra rails/connectors you get could go toward a DIY 3D printing frame (that’s my next project)!