Installation

Similar to most other HTPC cases, there is no removable tray inside Ahanix’s latest D-Vine, and there are only six permanently mounted mounting pins for motherboards, limiting the number of motherboards that will fully mount in the case. There are a full seven PCI slots available for use, however, so standard ATX boards are really what the case was designed for.

We have been testing our HTPC cases with a micro ATX board, however, with the knowledge that a good percentage of HTPC cases are still designed for use only with smaller motherboards, and we want to keep our testing consistent across all the case reviews.


Click to enlarge.

Seeing as how we only had the permanently mounted screw standoffs to work with, there were only four screws that lined up between our motherboard and the case. This could be a pretty serious problem considering the force that it takes sometimes to plug in or take out certain cables or components on the motherboard. It would not have been too much trouble simply to include some extra screw-in style standoffs and additional mounting configurations, and it would have allowed the MCE601 to offer more support to a much wider range of motherboards.

Getting a 5-1/4” or 3-1/2” drive into the appropriate cage is a bit of a challenge, but with the help of a long-shafted screwdriver, it should not pose much of a problem. The HDD cage is quite a bit easier to take out and reinstall, and after connecting all the components and installing the various parts, we were ready to run our benchmarking tests.

Construction Benchmarking - Thermal
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  • ImJacksAmygdala - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

    Show me a single HTPC case that has two 120mm fans and a ATX power supply and I'll buy it. The first company that takes the Antec Sonata or SLK3700BQE design and flips it on its side with a horizontal DVD drive, HT component damper feet, and a clean HTPC face plate gets my money. Currently no such case exists on the market. Antec tried and failed with the Overture design due to the heat enthusiast systems now create, and for some reason they haven't thought about using the popular design of the Sonata and SLK3700BQE. If you go to the silentpcreview forums you can find tons of threads on these cases, and I am surprised no one has tried to mod one horizontal yet.
  • araczynski - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

    cheap, retro wannabe, thin aluminum crap. probably made in vietnam for $0.50.

    but all the more power to them if they can sell this pile of sh*t to idiots.
  • Tamale - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

    It was a tad akward perhaps, but that is what I meant to say.. the hard drive's local air isn't really getting pushed or pulled anywhere thus keeping that area warmer than it should be..

    as far as the power supply, yes it offers the 20 or 24 pin connections, but no i didn't notice any 6-pin VGA connectors.
  • Spacecomber - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

    While these cases (Ahanix) are nice to look at, I have to agree with the consensus that there just doesn't seem to be enough good about them to justify a $300 price tag.

    I thought that the review was well done. I'll add just one small suggestion: more information on the vpower supply would be helpful. Maybe a shot of the label, so the power capacity on the different rails would be available. Also, perhaps add a mention of whether it is a 20 or a 24 pin ATX power connector and whether it provides the new 6 pin PCI video card connectors.

    Finally, I think this sentence is mis-written, "It is a bit discouraging to see that the hard drive itself is not really any hotter than what we are used to seeing, but the warm air created from that component must not be moving much, as that area of the case is still quite warm. "

    Still, a good start and I look forward to other reviews.

    Space
  • Tamale - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

    Sorry about the broken images when the review first went up.. they should all be fixed now. This is my first review so things didn't all go quite as smoothly as I had hoped. I'm still trying to find the best ways to illuminate the cases before I shoot, but I feel the only real problem I had with most of these shots was a failure to manually set my white balance. Your feed back is highly valued though everyone.. thanks!

    -Joshua Buss
  • Tamale - Friday, May 6, 2005 - link

  • Zirconium - Thursday, May 5, 2005 - link

    I don't care how good this case is - for the almost $300 that it costs, I can get a Shuttle cube.
  • ncage - Thursday, May 5, 2005 - link

    Cool looking case. Would definitly look like a piece for your home theater and wouldn't stick out like a normal case would but the cost is WAY WAY WAY WAY to high. If it was in the $100 range i would think about it but at this price no way. Im just going to get a super mini case from antec.
  • Houdani - Thursday, May 5, 2005 - link

    Ditto the troubles with the thermal images. Win2K, IE6.

    The missing images are the ones which display the temperature readings -- the ones we really care about. The mouse-over images will disply fine when you put your mouse on the placeholders, but those are just the pictures of the case innards less the thermal scores. Zoinks.
  • piasabird - Thursday, May 5, 2005 - link

    I think a slot loading notebook drive would be better for a case like this. Might help with the air flow. I think possibly the intel chipset for the mobile desktop motherboard might be better. A centrino setup might be nice. I cant see many designs that can cool off multiple hard drives in a case this size in an efficient manner. If you have a vent on the bottom where the hard drive rack goes a low rpm fan might help. If the hard drives sat verticle they might cool better. Sitting horizontal they block the air flow.

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