PC Case mit Fenster auf RECHTER Seite?
Hey, ich suche ein PC Case wo das Fenster auf der Rechten Seite ist, da der PC links von mir steht. Hab keine Cases im Internet gefunden welche extra das Fenster auf der rechten Seite haben. Deswegen gehe ich davon aus das man PC Cases einfach drehen kann, die Teile rausnimmt und auch dreht und wieder einbaut. Stimmt das?
Ich hab ein Case im Auge. Kann das sein das das bei dem so geht?
Gerne auch Erfahrungsberichte. Danke für jede Hilfe
The problem is that you want to have the window on the right side, you also have to have the motherboard and all other components on your head.
On the one hand, this means that all the fonts and decorative elements are on the head, which usually looks stupid, and on the other hand you have to worry about the cooling.
Therefore, there are practically no normal cases that are only designed to the right. Cases that can be converted to the right are also expensive and rare. From an engineering point of view, it is an enormous effort to construct a housing in such a way that you can use it with two completely different layouts. Where in a standard housing a few steel sheets are punched and riveted or folded, an invertable housing must be disassembled into its individual parts, and each part involved must function in both orientations, even if this is suddenly on the head and down at the case when it was up before.
The only manufacturer I know from the stand-up is BeQuiet. Of course not in all models, but the high-end models (900s, 800s and 700s) can be inverted.
But even the cheapest of it costs about three times a Deep Cool CC360.
Hello Max
With my Cooler Master MasterBox Q500L this goes without problems. The part is so modular that you have to put only the “foot”.
I painted the case silver on them and on the outside.
https://www.coolermaster.com/catalog/cases/mid-tower/masterbox-q500l/
At the Deepcool, it looks like the USB panel is installed at the top. That would then be below.😭
No, this is only possible with very few housings, for example:
https://www.bequiet.com/en/case/silent-base-802/4363
Then the motherboard is turned.
Hello,
yes, there is. Search for “Inverted PC Case”
and here at YT in the description:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ROhXzMJqGI
I think that makes sense that the window is always on the left. I want you to see the computer’s inner life. If the window is on the right side, you only look at the back (plate) of the motherboard and the metal frame. Since the motherboard is always installed in such a way that the equipped board side and also CPU, cooler, graphics card, etc turn left, you wouldn’t see anything of it.
In the case mentioned by you, one seems to be able to exchange the side parts. But you can’t see it in the picture.
Another possibility would be a completely transparent housing like this:
https://www.computerwissen.de/hardware/component-peripherie/gehaeuse/caseking-praesented-acryl-gehaeuse-von-sunbeam/
No, the motherboard is turned.
The motherboard cannot be installed on the other side in any case. I’ve already assembled some computers and most of the cases aren’t.
Manufacturers like BeQuiet have such housings in the program (the series 900, 800 and 700 can be inverted), which are of course already thought out and all parts find their place. They’re on their head anyway.
However, the statement that the power supply is generally above, also no longer the state of the art. With most glazed housings it is below, often under a cover, because no one wants to see the cable salad. It is also better for cooling. It’s been like this for many years.
This makes sense, which is not rotated by 180 degrees, but by 90 degrees, then the motherboard and graphics card connections usually show up.
Based on my previous experience, it makes no sense. Even if the motherboard can be turned around – i.e. left – it is turned around the longitudinal axis so that the slots for graphics card etc. show to the back of the housing. It stands on the head and the slot for the graphics card is possibly above and there is usually the power supply. So it doesn’t make any sense for me. But so far I have only built computers where the motherboard is “normal”.
Of course, it’s only a few cases. But it’s because you wrote that it doesn’t make any sense that there are left-oriented PC cases.