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Thread: Project Tranquillity

  1. #1
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    Cool Project Tranquillity

    Allright, this project is getting close to the end but still not done yet so I will copy and paste the steps up until now from another forum...


    It is time to start one more little project to do before I continue with the Time Machine.

    As you can see by the name it is yet again inspired by the characters in Peter F. Hamiltons The Night's Dawn Triology. For those of you who has read the books knows that Tranquillity is a big space habitat with roughly a cubic kilometre of brain matter.

    That is where all similarities ends though. Tranquillity here will be used as some kind of router lab by friends in need so it will have 9 motherboards and 30+ network cards in the smallest possible volume. The construction material will be MDF so a good exercise before starting the work on the Time Machine.

    Anyway, time to get the work started.

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    So nine systems, nothing fancy needed really. The minimum specification on the list I got was:

    CPU: 200MHz
    RAM: 64MB
    HDD: 1GB
    PCI slots: 4
    Integrated video or able to run without videocard installed.




    The best place to find cheap old specification hardware is and will always be eBay. After winning two auctions with six computers each I ended up with this pile of 12 very heavy units. The hardware in nine of them did fit the bill with Celeron 366MHz, 64MB RAM, 4.3GB HDD, MicroStar 6117 motherboards (AGP, 5 PCI) as well as 140W PSUs. The other three will be sold on to another friend since I won't need them.





    Another auction brought me 33 Intel Pro/100 NICs





    Two evenings had to be spent extracting the hardware from the cases, not to mention chasing the dust rats with the vacuum cleaner. The blue bucket is filled with hardware to keep such as videocards, soundscards, NICs and IDE cables. The plastic bags contain the plastic parts destined for the bin.





    A little bit of jumping and the old cases became flat packs and will meet the bin as well.

    The steel is over 1mm so they are very heavy, but then again they were designed to be used in the most rough environment imaginable - public schools.





    With the disassembly done, this is all that remains.

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    Allright, minor update.

    I removed all brackets from the NICs and installed them in the motherboards to test different layouts.





    After a few trial and errors this ended up being the most efficient layout, a switch will be included as well to provide management connectivity.





    With the general design in the head I quickly draw the whole case in CAD. Each vertical "tray" will hold two motherboards with HDDs and PSUs. Only the mobo/NICs/CPU are drawn since the HDD and PSU is one layer further back. Each tray is 325mm (12.8") high and 340mm (13.4") deep. The whole unit will be 800mm (31.5") wide, 500mm (19.7") deep and 450mm (17.7") high with casters installed.

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    Update time.



    Finally time to do some actual contruction work and not only cleaning old hardware which seems to be the most common case lately... So with the case being built by MDF board has a few advantages, the main one is to have it all precut in store. However next time I will make my life easier by drawing out the cut pattern in CAD as well instead of trying to place out all parts on the fly in store to generate as little spill as possible. Here we have the bottom half of the main frame laid out to see if it fit.





    The box is slowly drilled and screwed together using 2.5" screws and L-brackets to get the angle square. The brackets will be the rear of the finished unit btw.





    The outer layer of MDF is 18mm (3/4") while the internal spacers between the aluminium profiles are 6mm (1/4"). The spacers and the profiles are simply attached using PVA glue.





    Profiles and spacers on both top and bottom glued in place. With nearly 1" thick material this unit is getting heavy, can't wait to install some casters tomorrow or next week after MML.

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    Final update before I leave for MML tomorrow.




    To make the final unit movable 4 caster wheels were added using M6 bolts and nuts.





    With the assembly of the outer frame done I was curious to see how it all looked like with some hardware in place. Next step will be to make the hardware trays before continuing on the outer texture/finish. I will definately go for a techno/armor kinda look.

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    Small update from the progress today.





    The time has come to work on the trays that will hold two complete systems each. The material is 6mm MDF. One nice little feature with MDF is that it can be threaded using normal metal taps. After drilling a fair number of 2.5mm holes they were quickly threaded to M3 and the motherboard stands were installed.

    I have a feeling some of the people defining the ATX standard did think twice since the stands from the opposite sides do stay clear from each other when the motherboards are mounted like this.






    Next to follow was adding a few more holes for the PSUs and HDDs. After a bit of pain I realized how awkward it turned out to be mounting the HDDs and PSUs. The PSU will block the mounting screws for the HDD on the opposite side but then it has to sit on top of it's power lead from the PSU on the same side... To make a long story short, four hands had helped but I got there in the end. Now I just have to make another four of these.

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    Another day, another update...





    It felt like manufacturing doing unit after unit. At last all are done regarding major assembly. Power button and LEDs are still left to do on these units. They will not be painted and when the outer shell is ready they won't be that easy to see anyway

    If you look closely you can see ribs of wood attached near the top edge. They were added to make the 6mm MDF fit perfectly centered inside the 10mm aluminium profile.





    The last tray was slightly different to make since it hold a system as well as a 16 port 10/100 switch. I wasn't too keen to add spacers to make the switch stay clear of the mobo stands so a suitable hole was drilled before gluing it in place.

    All new switches I get from now on will be gigabit only so this one will be retired together with this project in a far distant future...





    I can happily announce that somehow I managed to measure everything correctly so it did fit

    The spacing is 5mm between CPU and NICs on the next system.





    In case the HDDs needs to be reimaged that can be done fairly easily from the rear. It is lucky the PSUs has bypass power as well since this will eliminate the need for loads of messy cables and splitters.

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    Ok, tiny update.

    Yesterday I did fire up all systems for the first time to see if they worked. Well the first thing that happened was that one PSU blow up due to some joker setting it to 110V instead of 220V... Those of you watching the ModCam had the pleasure to see the flash and smoke live. With the PSU replaced I found out that two of the nine systems had duff motherboards. BIOS is dead, after resetting it I get a lovely input device error so unable to configure the BIOS to boot from HDD or floppy to reflash it. It will have to work with seven systems for now and then later on the mobos will be replaced.

    Anyway, time for some more good news.





    The work has started to give the outer shell a more interesting look compared to bare MDF. The armor plating is done using 2mm plywood and some basla wood.





    Slow but steady progress, this will probably take the whole next week to get done...

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    Measure, cut, sand, glue, measure, cut, sand, glue... repeat 54 times and this is the result.




    The top has all the wood work done, just going to add some details tomorrow before it is ready to be painted.






    The plates are 2mm plywood while the ribs are balsa wood. The biggest advantage of balsa, it is dead easy to cut so a scissor was all that was needed. Then just put it all in place with some cyanoacrylate glue.

    I'm still a bit undecided what to do with the sides though. Armor plating is one option, just that it feels a bit waste of time considering they won't be visible at it's final location.

  10. #10
    www.5lab.co.uk
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    with the bios there is a trick you can do. as you have lots of identical pcs, boot one of the working ones into dos. then swap the bios chips, pc still turned on. put in the duff bios chip and flash it. voila - one working chip
    hughlunnon@yahoo.com | I have sigs turned off..

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    Well I didn't actually have to go that far in the end. Even with the BIOS really messed up the two motherboards did happily boot up on a floppy and accepted the latest AMI BIOS clearing all issues.

    /me is a happy bunny.

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    Agent of the System ikonia's Avatar
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    are these going to be run as seperate entity machines, or clustered together ?
    It is Inevitable.....


  13. #13
    Spodes Henchman unrealrocks's Avatar
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    Heh - thats looking good How much those systems set you back? £100?

    G4 PowerMac - Tiger 10.4 - 512MB RAM
    MacBook - 2Ghz - 1GB RAM - 120GB HDD

    Rotel RC970BX | DBX DriveRack |2x Rotel RB850
    B&W DM640i | Velodyne 1512

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    Hexus.net Troll Dougal's Avatar
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    Why Tranquility?
    Quote Originally Posted by Errr...me
    I MSN offline people
    6014 3DMk 05

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    Gordy Gordy's Avatar
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    Nice to see you've posted here mashie

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    Illegal Alien wedge22's Avatar
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    • wedge22's system
      • Motherboard:
      • ASUS H87i PLUS
      • CPU:
      • 4770k
      • Memory:
      • 2x4GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3
      • Storage:
      • OCZ 240GB SSD and Seagate 3TB HDD
      • Graphics card(s):
      • PNY GTX 780 OC
      • PSU:
      • Silverstone SFX 450G
      • Case:
      • Fractal Node 304
      • Operating System:
      • Windows 8.1
      • Monitor(s):
      • Yamakasi 27" IPS and 1080p 100" Projector
      • Internet:
      • 50MB
    Looking good mate I am really looking forward to seeing the end product.
    Main Rig: i2600k@4.3Ghz/ASUS P8P67 PRO/MSi GTX580/16GB Mushkin/HAF X/Noctua NH-D14

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