Silent operation

Powerful processor

Dedicated graphics

Large storage capacity

Aluminium heatsink used for “LED and power IC transistor”. The size is 150mm x 150mm x 35mm with 18 fins and 7mm gap between fins.

Streacom HT4 thermal riser.

Two types of CPU mounting brackets. One is a complete kit with screws (cpucooler.cn) and the other is an adjustable bracket for LGA 775/1366/1156 (no brand).

Custom built 32cm shielded Gen3.0 PCIE riser. Purchased from a Taiwan based eBay trader (http://www.ebay.com/usr/liheat48)

Aluminium mounting block from a fanless VGA cooler kit. Came with adjustable mounts to fit most graphics cards.

Proslim SATA cables from Akasa. These cables can be cut to length and are very thin – perfect for tight spaces.

Noiseblocker BlackSilentPro 80mm x 15mm Ultra Silent PWM Fan.

Gigabyte GA-Z97N-WIFI

Intel Core i7-4790S Haswell Quad-Core 3.2 GHz, 65W TDP

Corsair Vengeance (2x8GB) DDR3 1866 MHz

GTX 750 Ti 2GB (originally used GT 640 for this build but similar in terms of TDP, 60-65W)

Panasonic UJ-265 Blu-ray Burner

4 x 2.5 inch drives. Currently using the following:2 x SanDisk 240GB (Extreme II and Ultra II)

2 x 2TB Seagate HDD (ST2000LM003 HN-M201RAD)

PicoPSU-160-XT 160W

Apple BCM94360CD and mini PCIe adapter card

Xbox 360 205W power brick modded to use with PicoPSU (see http://www.instructables.com/id/the-Brick-PSU/)

I recently completed another Mac Cube mod. My previous Cube mods have never been satisfactory as I wanted to achieve the following:This mod is largely a prototype for whether I could achieve all of the above and has taken a long time to complete. Minor modifications are required to fit the core into the original Cube case.The main idea of this mod is to keep the heat generated by the CPU and GPU to the centre of the Cube core. This was done by interlocking another aluminium heatsink in between the fins of the original heatsink. The original heatsink is used for the CPU and the additional heatsink used for the GPU.A small 80x80x25mm PWM fan helps to vent the heat out.Since I don’t have access to a CNC milling machine I chose parts that would do the job with minimal modifications out of the box, using a Dremel and drill. After much searching on eBay (and trial and error with various parts) I found the following worked well, pictures follow.I’ve only listed the main parts here.CPU - The Streacom thermal riser is attached to the original heatsink by hex screws from behind the heatsink. The adjustable mount bracket (with adjusters for screws removed) is also attached to the Streamcom thermal riser with hex screws.GPU - The aluminium LED heatsink is cut to the same length as the original heatsink and additional fins cut off with only 10 remaining. The aluminium mounting block from a fanless VGA cooler kit is attached to the LED heatsink from behind with hex screws. The graphics card is attached with plastic clips. The GPU is held in place with screws into the base of the cube’s existing air holes.Blu-ray. The blu-ray drive uses the original DVD outer housing with some 3mm plexi-glass along the edges for support.HDD and SSDs. The 2.5 inch drives attach to a tray made from 3mm plexi-glass, painted white. The screws are countersunk given space constraints. The two SSDs are to allow dual OSes (OS X and Windows on separate drives). The larger 2TB drives are for storage and backups.The SATA data and power cables are cut to length and shown connected to the drives below.The picoPSU is wired up according to minihack’s guide ( http://www.tonymacx86.com/powermac-g4-cube/43924-cube-switch-modding.html )). The LED glows brighter when your finger is close to the switch, and less bright when the computer is on.Top view with the fan installed.Other views of the build in the PowerLogix case.Geekbench 32 bit: 13594Geekbench 64 bit: 16074Idle:CPU 42°CGPU 26°CLoad:CPU 82°CGPU 61°CI created a custom fan profile using HWMonitor. The fan speed is set to operate at 1000 RPM, which is inaudible, most of the time at 65°C and lower and only reaches maximum speed of 2500RPM above 75°C.Some modification would be required to fit into the original Cube case.Move the Wifi card using a mini PCIe extender cable. It is too close to the retractable handle.Cut slots into the top of the GPU heatsink to match the original heatsink. This is needed to accommodate the metal brackets inside the original cube case.I’m very happy with the mod and the computer set up. It achieves everything I wanted, although it hasn't been the simplest build.MacAddict