Hello EB'ers
I've been working with computers for ~20 years now and realized (while explaining how to build a PC) how awesome it would be to have something build-able to demonstrate. It started off as close as possible to a real PC, but morphed a little into something more retro, more compact, and more lego-ish.
I submitted to LEGO Ideas in hopes that with enough support, one day it becomes a real set. And while I'd love your support (please feel free to hit the support button), I'm posting here because I really want to get feedback, both on the design as well as (if you're a PC builder) the setup.
I started with a whitebox case - very common for 20 years ago - and made it yellow (since all the whitebox PCs of that era have aged that way).
The motherboard is a mixed bag of accuracy - it's not a square/rectangle but I wanted to fill more of the case - so it's a L shaped board. I included visible traces, capacitors, dies, and more. Mounted to the case at 9 places, just like a real custom build these days. The motherboard has 2x PCI slots, although I'm almost thinking to change one to an AGP for more accuracy. Lastly I included a serial (DB-9) port, but no PSU ports. I may revisit that decision as well.
There's a CPU, with a much beefier cooler on top of it (and fan is on the back, not top) then you would find done in the Pentium 3 era. It just looked better that way, so I sacrificed a little accuracy here. It has a mounting brackets and attaches to the mobo via 4 studs.
Hard Drive (not SSD) is super detailed. We got platters, the head, and a logic board. SATA connections were uncommon back then, but trying to build an IDE port was... not easy.
There's a PSU that has coils, caps, and more inside. And there's a GPU that's made up of a board, chip, heatsink, plastic cover, and some fans.
So, what do you think? What areas would you improve or change on?
More pictures on the ideas thread (link: https://ideas.lego.com/projects/80133e0b-f6ec-4a9f-882e-e2666191b364)