This unusual case wants to house your next PC

Last Updated on July 15, 2017 by Dave Farquhar

The Lope I-Tee computer case is, well, shaped like a T.
When David Huff e-mailed me about it, he called it interesting. I’ll certainly agree with that.

Here’s the idea: You mount the motherboard up against the back plane of the case and put the drives and the power supply up front, yielding a case that’s not as deep as a conventional case and cools better. Allegedly.

I hesitate to write about it because I haven’t worked with one, I haven’t tested one, and I haven’t even seen one. Hmm. I really don’t know anything about it but of course I have an opinion about it. I feel so Slashdotty.

One big advantage of a layout like this is that all the ports are on the side where you can see them and get to them easily. The biggest disadvantage of a layout like this is that all the ports are on the side where you can see them, and depending on the way your desk is set up, they might be on the wrong side.

USB peripherals and front-mount USB ports are the usual cure for fumbling around the back–you can plug your digital camera or other things that move around a lot up there–but plugging your other peripherals in the back hides the cables and prevents things from getting too unsightly. Let’s face it, plugs and cables don’t fit traditional, conventional ideas of a thing of beauty.

On the plus side, cases that disassemble easily are always nice, as are cases that take up less space. But a couple of minutes with my ruler and my ATX cases shows this case isn’t any less deep than most of my mainstream cases, and due to its shape, it is considerably wider. I’d love something that genuinely took up less space on or under my desk, but this case won’t be it.

This case won’t flop on the marketplace though. They claim it improves cooling. Whether that’s true or not doesn’t matter. People buy aluminum cases because they supposedly conduct heat better. The reality is the difference in heat conductivity between expensive aluminum cases and cheap steel cases is nearly zero, and what difference you can measure is more likely due to aiflow than its material. Enthusiast overclockers still buy them anyway, hoping to get an extra 5 MHz out of their overclock. The same kind of people who buy aluminum cases for overclocking will go for the I-Tee, especially if the I-Tee’s cost is close to that of a mainstream case.

I can’t make any recommendations for or against it, based on not seeing it. But I’m willing to go out on a limb and say this–or a design like it–will survive at least as a niche product.

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6 thoughts on “This unusual case wants to house your next PC

  • January 14, 2003 at 8:36 am
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    I really don’t know anything about it but of course I have an opinion about it. I feel so Slashdotty.

    ROTFL! Don’t worry Dave, nobody’s ever going to confuse you with the typical /. commentator… 😉

  • January 14, 2003 at 9:01 am
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    Hey Dave,
    Do you or anyone in your community here have experience with the newer Shuttle XPC cases? I like the idea of a small case, and the SB51G has Hyperthread support, decent video and an AGP slot. I’m concerned about heat in a 3+ GHz processor though. Noise from the fans too.

  • January 14, 2003 at 10:28 am
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    was that slashdirty?

  • January 14, 2003 at 11:08 am
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    Mark, I don’t have experience with the Shuttle small-factor PCs but they sure have had me thinking. I want one, but I wanted things like a house more. Priorities…

    THG looked at them back in August, and noise wasn’t a problem at all with them–they said it was very quiet–but when they decked one out with a 2.5 GHz CPU, two HDs, second NIC and a high-end video card, they said internal temperatures reached 50-55°C (122-131°F). That’s definitely a bit excessive. I wouldn’t put any more inside that tiny box than you absolutely need.

  • January 14, 2003 at 1:48 pm
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    It looks like it wants to roll around the room…
    Overclockers will buy it, but I will stick with my aluminum case. I just like the “clean” look of a well designed aluminum case 😉

  • January 14, 2003 at 4:12 pm
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    You can see it at http://www.lope.com.tw/i-tee.htm

    It looks sharp, and it’s appealing just because it’s new and different, but I have some reservations about the data cables (IDE/SCSI). I suppose it matters where the plugs reside on the mobo, but the cables would have to be awfully long to reach from the drive to the removable back when it’s all the way down.

    Yes, they have the limiting strap (probably introduced as a .1 release somewhere along the line), but one of the things I like about my tower is that I can flip it over on its side and push down – adding cards, screwing in cards, hooking up cables.

    I doubt I’ll buy one, but I’d definitely accept it as a gift.

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