
LemonTree
Suck 'em and see!
I have an old Antec 19" rackmount case. It has no acoustic treatment as such but all the mounting points for drive bays, case fans etc are on rubber grommits.
I spent probably 1/3 more buying good akasa cpu and case fans than I would buying stock parts and it runs near silent. I have to get on my knees and put my ear to the case to hear any sound come from it.
I think it's a mix of having a good case with damped mounting points, low acoustic noise fans, graphics card with a heat sink rather than a fan. Do your homework and find parts like hard drives and dvd burners that have acoustic levels printed in the spec sheet.
Save yourself the hastle of building a silent box to put your PC in, it will only generate more heat and put stress on your system when you are heavily into a mix. Heat = cooling = noise.
Get a dual or quad core cpu that is fast enough to run your studio without over clocking it, this too only produces more heat which in turn requires more cooling and generates more noise..it's a bit like getting the perfect ingredients to bake a cake.
I spent probably 1/3 more buying good akasa cpu and case fans than I would buying stock parts and it runs near silent. I have to get on my knees and put my ear to the case to hear any sound come from it.
I think it's a mix of having a good case with damped mounting points, low acoustic noise fans, graphics card with a heat sink rather than a fan. Do your homework and find parts like hard drives and dvd burners that have acoustic levels printed in the spec sheet.
Save yourself the hastle of building a silent box to put your PC in, it will only generate more heat and put stress on your system when you are heavily into a mix. Heat = cooling = noise.
Get a dual or quad core cpu that is fast enough to run your studio without over clocking it, this too only produces more heat which in turn requires more cooling and generates more noise..it's a bit like getting the perfect ingredients to bake a cake.