Love your work! Lets talk later in the year when we have the Monoblock 2.0, as currently we don't have enough Monoblocks for another build. Much love ✌
I’d be interested, I have a mono block and everything to get the build going besides a case, I have a 3d printer myself but I’m not the best at designing stuff like this
Loved hte "POV" kind of way showing of your thinking and everything, made me feel way more involved and understand things much easier. The only thing i'd maybe change is the volume of your "machining" sections. Please keep them in, they are superb, but the volume at 17:27 blew my ears away lol. Other than that, nothing to complain, keep it up! :D
Cooling would be MUCH easier with a 7800X3D or 7950X3D... would also probably be faster due to thermal contraints and easily upgradeable when next gen Zen is released. Awesome build none the less!
The point is that Billet labs design and manufacture their own mono block which specifically fits the 3090ti or 4090, and they are building to a customer’s spec. It’s not like Jayz2cents or LTT where they just throw their sponsors’ latest gift into a system and just plug it all together.The guys should have explained this at the start for viewers unfamiliar with their products and their ethos of sff builds, as well as showing the disassembly of the video card and the mounting of the mono block. It’s great to see the problem solving and real life application of design and engineering. Looking forward to the next vid!
@@paulyeomans1065 We are on the same page. I've been following them since Linus did a Linus. They made comments about it being a client build iirc. I was pointing out the cooling to show how much potential there would be for anyone else choosing to have them build something. And yes I do find it very ironic that LTT was exceptionally negative in their 'review' of the monoblock but constantly review laptops that try to do a very similar thing (shared cooling), but have nowhere near the same level of execution. If anyone at AMD is reading this review... SEND THESE MEN SOME HARDWARE. SFF builds showcase your platform advantages exceptionally well.
i think the point was to generate as much heat as possible in that case. intel is usually the best choice when performance per watt isn't important. lol.
I agree with you guys that the Jonsbo case looks sweet, and the single thumb nut with the inner chassis tray is pretty great to work on from the looks of it. I'm blown away by the amount of modification that was needed to get the space necessary to make this all work too, also love the willingness to screw up a case to make it perform better. I trust you guys will have a really cool rear panel, and would love to see the final configuration with all the holes cut in the case with the mesh and stuff.
Has anyone made a 120mm fan that side vents? Like a blower fan you could strap to a radiator. You'd just need some slits along the case top then for it to vent out of and you'd be golden.
The N1 from Jonsbo is actually a good-looking case, but I don't understand why the customer wanted this for a gaming PC. The N1 is actually an ITX NAS case and is equipped accordingly. An alternative would have been a T1 from ncased, which offers much better options for setting up an ITX gaming PC. No parts would have had to be sawn out or anything else removed. With a little creativity, both parts could have been easily water-cooled. Someone fell victim to the Intel tax on the CPU. Sorry for him.
Not really. There's a bunch of strange unnecessary modifications going on. Personally, I don't see the point of going for a large 240 rad and removing large bits of the case metalwork when they could've used 2 120mm rads at the front and take advantage of the built in cooling setup.
@@BrunodeSouzaLino It's a 280mm rad, and you'd have to stack your 2x 120mm rads, which is only going to give them a tiny bit more cooling than a single 120mm rad.
@@Jonny-ij8vfPlace a fan in between the rads. Sure, that's innefficient, but so is cramming a 280 rad in a place where there's not enough space for the air to come out. And since their waterblock uses rigid tubbing, that makes things worse. If anything, the space left after removing the HDD backplane and cage could even allow for some spacing between rads.
@@Jonny-ij8vfI'm sure they would go for thicker fans with a thinner rad and go back to the same problem. I don't know why they want to create the impression that there's barely enough space in that case when they could fit a 55mm thick 280 rad in there.
I find strange that the case is build for front feeding airflow and they could've used 2 small radiators instead of a large one and take advantage of that.
If the customer went for the Jonsbo N2 case instead, you'd have a bit more space, since it moves the 5 HDD backplane to the bottom and adds hot swap bays, which could be removed and that space utilized. If anything, a better idea would've been taking advantage of the front fan design and going for a front mounted rad instead or two. That would give more space for tubbing and the like, since you could mount the PSU at the place it's supposed to be. I find strange that builders often insist on using a single large radiator when you see multiple radiator setups in all sorts of vehicles out there.
Crazy how well the blocks perform when they are installed on the correct hardware
Would y’all be interested in a custom 3D Printed case made specifically for Billet Labs? It would be so much fun!
Love your work! Lets talk later in the year when we have the Monoblock 2.0, as currently we don't have enough Monoblocks for another build. Much love ✌
@@BilletLabs thanks and looking forward to y’all’s great work! Keep it up!!!
I’d be interested, I have a mono block and everything to get the build going besides a case, I have a 3d printer myself but I’m not the best at designing stuff like this
@@SN0WMAN801 I'll post something once I get my hands on a unit from @BilletLabs😇
Looking forward to seeing the progress on this build!
Keep it going guys. Good project to work on!
Can't wait to see part two!
Loved hte "POV" kind of way showing of your thinking and everything, made me feel way more involved and understand things much easier.
The only thing i'd maybe change is the volume of your "machining" sections. Please keep them in, they are superb, but the volume at 17:27 blew my ears away lol.
Other than that, nothing to complain, keep it up! :D
Cooling would be MUCH easier with a 7800X3D or 7950X3D... would also probably be faster due to thermal contraints and easily upgradeable when next gen Zen is released. Awesome build none the less!
The point is that Billet labs design and manufacture their own mono block which specifically fits the 3090ti or 4090, and they are building to a customer’s spec. It’s not like Jayz2cents or LTT where they just throw their sponsors’ latest gift into a system and just plug it all together.The guys should have explained this at the start for viewers unfamiliar with their products and their ethos of sff builds, as well as showing the disassembly of the video card and the mounting of the mono block. It’s great to see the problem solving and real life application of design and engineering. Looking forward to the next vid!
@@paulyeomans1065 We are on the same page. I've been following them since Linus did a Linus. They made comments about it being a client build iirc. I was pointing out the cooling to show how much potential there would be for anyone else choosing to have them build something.
And yes I do find it very ironic that LTT was exceptionally negative in their 'review' of the monoblock but constantly review laptops that try to do a very similar thing (shared cooling), but have nowhere near the same level of execution.
If anyone at AMD is reading this review... SEND THESE MEN SOME HARDWARE. SFF builds showcase your platform advantages exceptionally well.
i think the point was to generate as much heat as possible in that case. intel is usually the best choice when performance per watt isn't important. lol.
I agree with you guys that the Jonsbo case looks sweet, and the single thumb nut with the inner chassis tray is pretty great to work on from the looks of it. I'm blown away by the amount of modification that was needed to get the space necessary to make this all work too, also love the willingness to screw up a case to make it perform better. I trust you guys will have a really cool rear panel, and would love to see the final configuration with all the holes cut in the case with the mesh and stuff.
You guys are amazing! Keep doing what you are doing. awesome job!
This is incredible 😮
Lol! The Billet Labs guys are famous thanks to Linus and Steve. Obviously for different reasons! Good luck guys!
It's very interesting what will happen in the end =)
How about installing a centrifugal fan instead of a regular fan? Then you can direct the ejected air upwards in the housing
Wait till he realizea that you can cram those components into a 9.9L case as well with a 240mm and a 280mm radiator
The Formd T1 is one awesome case
"When you've got power tools you can make things fit". Words to live by.
which sfx psu did u use?
The Coolermaster V1300 230V. (V1100 for US)
Has anyone made a 120mm fan that side vents? Like a blower fan you could strap to a radiator. You'd just need some slits along the case top then for it to vent out of and you'd be golden.
The N1 from Jonsbo is actually a good-looking case, but I don't understand why the customer wanted this for a gaming PC.
The N1 is actually an ITX NAS case and is equipped accordingly.
An alternative would have been a T1 from ncased, which offers much better options for setting up an ITX gaming PC.
No parts would have had to be sawn out or anything else removed.
With a little creativity, both parts could have been easily water-cooled.
Someone fell victim to the Intel tax on the CPU. Sorry for him.
I was thinking of using that case for a build , well done lads now I realise that it would be a nightmare 😅
Not really. There's a bunch of strange unnecessary modifications going on. Personally, I don't see the point of going for a large 240 rad and removing large bits of the case metalwork when they could've used 2 120mm rads at the front and take advantage of the built in cooling setup.
@@BrunodeSouzaLino It's a 280mm rad, and you'd have to stack your 2x 120mm rads, which is only going to give them a tiny bit more cooling than a single 120mm rad.
@@Jonny-ij8vfPlace a fan in between the rads. Sure, that's innefficient, but so is cramming a 280 rad in a place where there's not enough space for the air to come out. And since their waterblock uses rigid tubbing, that makes things worse. If anything, the space left after removing the HDD backplane and cage could even allow for some spacing between rads.
@@BrunodeSouzaLino No, but if they go from the 55mm to a 25mm thick 280mm rad, that will be miles better than 2 stacked 120mm singles.
@@Jonny-ij8vfI'm sure they would go for thicker fans with a thinner rad and go back to the same problem. I don't know why they want to create the impression that there's barely enough space in that case when they could fit a 55mm thick 280 rad in there.
Looks beautiful but all the same radiator will cook itself. You should modify the case for more ventilation.
I find strange that the case is build for front feeding airflow and they could've used 2 small radiators instead of a large one and take advantage of that.
If the customer went for the Jonsbo N2 case instead, you'd have a bit more space, since it moves the 5 HDD backplane to the bottom and adds hot swap bays, which could be removed and that space utilized. If anything, a better idea would've been taking advantage of the front fan design and going for a front mounted rad instead or two. That would give more space for tubbing and the like, since you could mount the PSU at the place it's supposed to be. I find strange that builders often insist on using a single large radiator when you see multiple radiator setups in all sorts of vehicles out there.
worst heat pipe design idea
Heat pipes aren't even mentioned in this video?