A
Alienware: Cases
Q: Where can I get the new Alienware Case.??
A: If you really must have one of these, you can get them Here
Q: But, I REALLY like the Alienware Case, I can't afford an Alienware system ... Can't I just buy the case by itself?
A: Nope
Q: But, I REALLY REALLY like the new Alienware Case, I can't afford an Alienware system... What can I do, aren't these just OEM's from Chenming or Cheiftec? Can I just buy a knock off?
A: Nope, according to Alex Aguila President of Alienware the new look will be exclusive to Alienware forever.
Q: I REALLY REALLY REALLY like the new Alienware Big Ugly Plastic Head Alien Case. I feel like I should post a statement, question, or poll about it on every discussion board I can find. What should I do?
A: Prepeare to get flamed!
Anodized aluminum products (except aluminum mesh)
http://www.so-trickcomputers.com/Mer...ategory_Code=A
Anodizing: How Can I Do It Myself?
Generally, one would ship an aluminum part to an established anodizer, who has the know how and experience to correctly anodize your part. However, if you want to investigate how you'd do it yourself;
http://www.paintballtimes.com/Article.asp?ID=74
Appliques: Applying
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=106
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...pp/index.shtml
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/etch/
Appliques: DIY Color Appliques
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=198
AT case to ATX case conversion
http://www.moddingzone.com/articles/at-to-atx/
ATX case specifications (for building custom cases)
dimensions specified for ATX, FlexATX, MicroATX, NLX and SFX.
http://www.formfactors.org/developer..._resources.htm
B
BayBus: Fan Bus
http://www.fanbus.com < Quite a few designes
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...us/index.shtml < simple fan bus
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...us/index.shtml < on/off baybus w/blue LEDs
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...us/index.shtml < Good 7v/off/12v baybus with dual LED guide
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...us/index.shtml < 5v/off/12v guide, Note that 5v may not start all fans
http://bit-tech.net/article/52/2 < Simple on/off fanbus
http://bit-tech.net/article/52/3 < 2 good 7v/12v fanbus designs
(note that those designs can be 7/off/12 by using center off switches)
BayBus: LED Voltage Meter
http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/voltmon
BayBus: Matrix Orbital - Using GPOs
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/96/
BayBus: PWM (Pulse Width Modulation)
http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/pwm < Good tutorial by Uller
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/51/
BayBus: RheoBus/Adjustable Fan Speed
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/56/ < Simple single fan Rheo mod
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/52/4 < Three good designs
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...ts/index.shtml
BayBus: RotarySwitchs
http://www.pheaton.com/howtos/rotary.htm
BayBus: Tempreature Controlled
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...an/index.shtml
BayBus: Voltage Regulators
http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/vregtut < LM317 Voltage Regulator Tutorial by Uller
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/32/ < Rheobus w/Voltage Regulators
http://bit-tech.net/article/52/5
BayFiller: Logo Guide
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=205
BlowHoles
See Fans
Brackets: HDD Addon brackets (DIY)
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/xtrahd
C
Cables: Cleaning up/Orgainizing cables
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=94
Cables: Rounded / Glow in the dark / UV IDE/Floppy cables
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=34
http://www.so-trickcomputers.com/Mer...ategory_Code=C
http://www.jsihardware.com/articles.php?ID=4
Cables: Rounding your own
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guides/rc/index.shtml
http://www.gideontech.com/rcable01.shtml
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=34
Cables: Sleeving Guide
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...ng/index.shtml
Cables: Sleeving - Where to buy
http://www.voyeurmods.com/ (USA)
http://www.frozencpu.com/ (USA)
http://www.cableorganizer.com/ (USA)
http://www.lux-design.com/ (Canada)
Canadian Mod Suppliers
http://www.bigfootcomputers.com/
http://www.lux-design.com/
http://www.e-compuvision.com/
Case Brands: Lian-Li
http://www.lian-li.com/
http://www.so-trickcomputers.com/Mer...egory_Code=LLC [/QUOTE]
Case Badges: Where to buy case badges
http://www.caseetc.com/cgi-bin/casee...l?id=jwoy5rKhi
Case Badges: custom-made
There are many companies than make custom case badges. This company requires less and charge less.
http://www.scotgold.com
Cleaning: Cables
See Cables
Cleaning: Dremel
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/dclean/
Cleaning: Dusting/Cleaning PC's
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/clean/
Cleaning: Keyboard Dishwasher Howto
http://www.rabidhardware.net/index.php?id=9
Cleaning: Mesh Filters
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=106
Cutting: Dremel
A good rotary cutting tool that most case-modders use can be found at any hardware store or Walmart...
www.dremel.com
Cutting: Dremel Alternatives
Black and Decker makes the RTX and Wizard, both rotary tools and good alternatives to the Dremel. The Wizard is cheap at $20~$25, but is cordless which is not very good for cutting metals. RTX is $30~$40 and is essentially a dremel, corded and uses same bits. Can be found at nearly any hardware store or Walmart. http://www.blackanddecker.com/produc...ID=826_Sub_Web
Cutting: Dremel How-To
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/101/
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...el/index.shtml
Cutting: Nibbler
A hand nibbler can run you about 20 bucks it's good for side panels and other thin metals, a good place to buy is: www.eastwoodco.com (They are also available at most CompUSA's)
D
Decals: Legend Making
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/88/
Decals: Painting
See Painting: Decals
Desks: DIY Custom Desks
What type of wood is good to use?
Most people agree, best is 3/4" MDF.
How much does that cost?
It costs ~$20 for 4'x8'
What should I use for support?
Most common way are L braces available from Home Depot. They cost ~$2-3 a piece.
What type of paint can I use to get a real wood look?
One quart of some cherry wood (or whichever color you like)substance and the other quart was gloss. ~$7 total.
How much does it typically cost for a desk?
SpeedSlayer used 2 sheets, 2 quarts, like 50 screws, like 14 L shaped braces, and 2 triangular braces. It cost about $107 after tax.
E
EL cable
See Lighting
Electronics Vendors
Commercial Sellers
Jameco http://www.jameco.com/
Digikey http://www.digikey.com/
Mouser http://www.mouser.com/
Newark http://www.newark.com/
Electronix http://www.electronix.com/
Parts Express http://www.partsexpress.com/
Electronics Surplus Vendors (less selection, better prices)
BG Micro http://www.bgmicro.com/
All Electronics http://www.allelectronics.com/
Hosfelt http://www.hosfelt.com/
MPJA http://www.mpja.com/
American Science and Surplus http://www.sciplus.com/
Electronic Goldmine http://www.goldmine-elec.com/
Herbach & Rademan http://www.herbach.com/ [/QUOTE]
F
Fans: Basic Wiring
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...to/index.shtml
Fans: Blow Holes
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/blowhole/ < using dremel
(I would definately recommend using a holesaw, it makes a perfect hole every time)
Fans: Card Cooler (DIY)
http://www.gideontech.com/guides/cco...cooler01.shtml
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=231
Fans: Filters (anodized aluminum)
http://www.plycon.com/ (Located in U.S.A)
http://www.so-trickcomputers.com/ (Located in U.S.A)
Fans: Fixing noisy or stuck fans
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=84
Fans: HDD Cooler (DIY)
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=230
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/artic...8/index5.shtml
Fans: LED Fans (DIY)
See LEDs: DIY LED Fans
Fans: Painting
See Painting: Fans
Fans: Specifications
http://gizzo.8m.com/fans/
Fans: Volt Modding (speed control)
7v trick: hook up the + line of the fan to +12 and the ground line of the fan to +5
4pin fan:
http://www.flecom.net/[H]OCP/faq/4pin-7v.gif
Molex (PSU) Pinouts: 1 - yellow, 2 - black, 3 - black, 4 - red
Molex (FAN) Pinouts: 1 - red, 2 - black, 3 - n/c, 4 - n/c
3pin fan:
http://www.flecom.net/[H]OCP/faq/3pin-7v.gif
Molex Pinouts: 1 - yellow, 2 - black, 3 - black, 4 - red
Fan Pinouts: 1 - black, 2 - red, 3 - yellow/blue
If your fan will not start at 7V it may need a higher starting voltage: try this circuit which gives the fan +12 until the cap charges, then goes down to 7v
http://www.flecom.net/[H]OCP/faq/7v-nostart.gif
Fans: Wiring
http://gideontech.com/guides/molex/molex01.shtml
Floppy drive: shortening the floppy drive cable
http://mfpmax.tripod.com/floppymod/floppymod.html
G
Glowire wire
See Lighting: Glow Wire
H
Heatshrink
http://www.themodfathers.com/articles/heatshrink.php
Heatsinks: attatching heatsinks to chipsets or videocards without using screws
Arctic Silver Epoxy is best. If you don't have Arctic Silver Epoxy, you can ghetto-rig it using arctic silver in the middle and a little super-glue on each corner, as long as the heat-sink isn't too big.
Heatsinks: fixing noisy/stuck fans
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=83
Heatsinks: removing epoxied heatsinks (from video cards, chipsets, etc...)
1. Remove the fan.
2. Get a can of compressed air.
3. Spray the contents upside down onto the heatsink for 5 secs.
4. It should be frozen, so get a thin plastic card.
5. Put the card between the GPU and the HS.
6. Get a thin flat screwdriver.
7. Put the screwdriver between the card and the HS.
8. Twist the screwdriver.
9. If it does not come off easily, try doing it on each corner.
10. Clean up with 70% or 91% alcohol. If you need something stronger, acetone will do. Not the scented nail polish remover crap, the clear acetone. Then clean up again with alcohol.
11. Put a new Heatsink on using Arctic Silver Epoxy. [/QUOTE]
L
LEDs: Basics - resistors to use
To find the value of the resistor to use with your led, use this formula:
Resistance(Ohms) = (Supply Voltage - Forward V of LED)/ Current (A)
You should be able to find these values easily, usually on the back of the package or on the website you got them from. Current for LEDs is measured in mA. you will need to move the decimal over 3 places to get to Amps.
Example - 20mA = .02A
So to run a 3.5V blue led from 5V at 20mA (0.02Amps)...
resistance = (5V - 3.5V) / 0.02A = 75ohms
If you cant find a resistor of the exact result (which you usually wont) try to find the closest one, try to go with a little more resistance, than less, to prevent damage to the resistor or LED
If you still dont get it (or are lazy) use Linear's handy-dandy web calculator
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/68/
LEDs: Basics - Polarity - postive/negative
http://www.flecom.net/[H]OCP/faq/ledpol.gif
The longer lead is the + side. If the leads are the same size look carefully at the lens, you will see a division, the small divided side is the positive lead and the large divided side is the negative lead. You can always do trial and error, if one wiring doesn't work, than reverse it, the most damage you could do is burn out the LED but thats very unlikely.
LEDs: Basics - Parallel, Serial
http://www.flecom.net/[H]OCP/faq/ledcon.gif
Parallel LEDs are wired the same as a single ones with many resistor/LED curcuits connected across a single powersupply rail. Although you can use one resistor for multiple LED's it is generally strongly recommended that each LED should have it's own resistor to prevent one LED consuming more power than it should and to prevent overloading the resistor.
Series LEDs are two or more leds sharing one resistor. To calculate the resistor the "LED voltage" get the sum of all the led's voltages in the circuit. So for two of our 3.5V blue LEDs the voltage is now 3.5V + 3.5V = 7V. Obvously the 5V supply won't work for this one. So if you wanted to do this you would need to connect your circuit to the +12V rail of your PSU and calculate the supply voltage as 12 instead of 5
LEDs: DIY LED Fans
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/73/
http://www.themodfathers.com/articles/lightfan.php
LEDs: HDD "Activity" meter
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/83/
LEDs: Keyboard LEDs
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...ed/index.shtml
http://www.themodfathers.com/articles/kbleds.php
LEDs: Knight Rider mod
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/82/1 < DIY
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=191 < Front of antec/chieftec case, premade kit
LEDs: LED Meter
http://casemods.pointofnoreturn.org/cpumeter/ < good howto to make an LED Meter
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=184 < using your led meter with winamp
*Note that connecting LEDs directly to your parallel port can seriously damage it! I very much recommend you use Uller's design with a 74HCT373 chip, its inexpensive and is sold at radioshack
LEDs: NIC LED Mods
Great for router pcs!
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...od/index.shtml
LEDs: Replacing LED in Optical Drives
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...icle&artid=124
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...od/index.shtml
http://www.themodfathers.com/articles/cdromled.php
LEDs: Replacing LED in Optical Mice
http://www.twistedmods.com/modules.p...ticle&artid=37
LEDs: replacing Power & hard drive LEDs on the front of your case
Well, first you need to determine if it is a 5mm LED or a 3mm LED. Pick up some suitable replacements - any LED's rated from 2v - 5v forward voltage will probably work. A lot of people will tell you you need resistors but it's really not necessary. Chances are the original LED's were only 2v LED's and if you replace with 5v, it'll probably work fine but just a fraction less bright....
These LED's are usually held in place more times than not by little plastic clips. Just spread the clips and remove the LED. The LED will usually have two wires attached... One is usually black or white - this would be ground. The other is usually colored, like red or green - this would be positive. At this point you can just snip the old LED off or better, split open the black shrink wrap with an exacto knife and desolder it. Next take the new LED and determine the positive and negative on it. The positive usually is the longer pin, but not always. The negative is the shorter pin and if you can see inside the LED, the larger dish is connected to the negative pin. Check this thread for an illustration. A battery of some sort, (a couple of flashlight batteries taped together in series is fine), is helpful in this situation. You can pretest the LED to verify the positive and negative by connecting the pins to a couple of wires and tapping the wires on the ends of the battery.
Then just cut the pins to fit, solder the correct wires to the pins, shrink wrap it, - slip the shrink wrap on before soldering (or use electrical tape tightly wrapped) and snap it back in the clips...
To summarize: Figure out how yours are plugged in, take em out, put in new ones the same direction. You can always do trial and error, if one wiring doesn't work, than reverse it, the most damage you could do is burn out the LED but thats very unlikely.
If you want more info, check out this writeup:
http://www.virtual-hideout.net/guide...ds/index.shtml
LEDs: Strobes
http://www.bit-tech.net/article/80/


)
) use Linear's handy-dandy web calculator
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