Our SilverStone CS381 review shows why this 8-bay 3.5", plus 4x 2.5" SSD chassis is a great NAS and workstation hybrid enclosure
The post SilverStone CS381 Review a NAS and Workstation Hybrid appeared first on ServeTheHome.
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Update:
the Silverstone CS381 is expected to be available around late Q2 or early Q3 according to the company.
I just came across and saw this new case from Silverstone. The new design is quite impressed. it holds 8x3.5 hotswap + 2 SSDs. Couldn't find more detail information on it yet, but...
At Computex 2018 we saw a new iteration of the Silverstone CS381 desktop chassis that provides 8x 3.5" hot-swap bays and 2-4 2.5" internal SSD spots for a mATX server
The post Silverstone CS381 8-bay mATX Case Shown at Computex 2018 appeared first on ServeTheHome.
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i have cs381. i can check it in 2 days. thuesday you will know what kind of capacitors cs381 uses
UPDATE....the backplane of cs381 doesn't have capacitors at all
Anyone got any news on this case since Computex ?
Silverstone's twitter answer about this was :
"unfortunately are we not able to give out any details". I guess the silence around this case means that no one else knows anything, but you never know.
...I ended up fabricated something out of plastic rod and aluminum strips that enabled me to mount the NH-L12S on my X11SDV into my Silverstone CS381. It runs under full load the same as the factory cooler but silent. Used in a Silverstone CS381 with a passively cooled Quadra P2200. I meant...
Would love to see a (improved) rack version of the Silverstone CS381, short depth (my rack only has 16") and room for 6+ HDDs. Height is not a problem, only depth.
...at ~45C. Either way, the 2.5" chassis is likely not as relevant given I think the DS380 also had trouble cooling in its mITX chassis vs. the CS381 is now a larger mATX.
I'd imagine 5.4k 3.5" drives in a larger chassis would be well underneath that given the CS381 is 4*120mm fans and 15.8"...
The cs381 does have improved airflow over the drive bays but they messed up the airflow over the MB by using a solid sheet of metal on the front of the MB tray. So end of day their MB cooling is just as bad - maybe worse - than the nsc810a.
Interesting, what specifically on the Mobo should I be concerned about "overheating" or "running too warm"? Are you aware (or do you own the CS381), where temps have been reported to be elevated?
I am deciding between the 810A and CS381, and though an AIO solves any potential CPU heat issues...
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