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"Skylake Evolv ITX Classified"

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snmavronis
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2016/06/23 06:22:40 (permalink)

 
This is my first home PC build, completed in the middle of March 2016. Phanteks' Enthoo Evolv ITX windowed chassis is a very sexy looking mini-ITX case. It's not too small yet not too big. It has plenty of room for both tall custom graphics cards and CPU coolers. It also has some very nice features found in more expensive cases being very well made and looks fantastic. I decided to improve case airflow out of the box by adding a rear 140mm exhaust fan and replaced the stock 200mm intake fan with dual 140mm fans. I was worried the front panel might have to be modified with extra air vents, but found it wasn't an issue for me at all.
 

 
I like an air-cooled system using a large performance CPU heatsink cooler that doesn't block tall RAM modules. Thermalright's Silver Arrow ITX was a perfect fit in this regard. Its universal mounting system allows for 3-5mm of horizontal wiggle room next to installed RAM. It's also been ASUS ROG certified, originally designed for their premium Maximus Impact series of ITX motherboards. I had no issues mounting this to my beautiful ASUS Z170i Pro Gaming motherboard, although it's a shame the cooler hides almost all of it, except for the pretty heat spreader fins of my stylish G.Skill TridentZ DDR4 memory modules rising up tall and proud.
 
By request Thermalright sent me their new special LGA1151 CPU Support Spacer (and 4 Special Mounting Nut Washers) free of charge. Even though no Thermalright coolers were involved, it's a voluntary proactive measure by them after reports by some showing Intel's thinner Skylake processor PCB bending at the corners due to excessive cooler mounting screw pressure or pre-built system shipping vibration damage. Thermalright recommends their free support spacer for any of their coolers weighing over 500g. Their beefy Silver Arrow ITX cooler weighs in at 700g and includes a red 'ROG' style TY-149 fan weighing 170g. They are not required but I felt like not taking any chances since it was the first time I ever mounted an aftermarket CPU cooler.
 

 
Product case badges are cool but I didn't want to use them as normal stickers on my case. Instead I came up with the idea to make movable magnetic case badges. A roll of 1" wide magnetic tape cut to size did the trick. Right now they occupy the rather empty space next to the rubber cable grommets. I also removed the unused mid-plate Phanteks logo (gently peeled away using a plastic bread bag clip) and made a magnetic case badge out of it too!
 

 
To avoid heavy GPU sag that typically occurs, I planned ahead and made myself a DIY standoff by cutting down a stiff plastic 2.1mm power connector strain relief cone. I inserted it through one of the PSU shroud holes where acts as a sturdy support column between the PSU and GPU cooler shroud. My massive EVGA GTX 980 Ti Classified Gaming ACX 2.0+ graphics card sits perfectly level and will never sag. This also insures plenty of intake airflow to the dual 100mm ACX cooling fans. One thing that I wish they would have done was make the large EVGA logo LED lit through the backplate. ;)
 

 
I'll be using my new PC for FPS gaming playing DOOM (2016), multimedia editing, and productivity purposes. I manually XMP overclocked my i7-6700K to 4.5 GHz at 1.28V, Core/Cache Limit Max to 255.50, Min/Max Cache Ratios to 41, LLC to Level 5, and enabled Core Voltage Adaptive Mode. The XMP profile in the ASUS Z170i UEFI BIOS clocked my G.Skill DDR4 TridentZ memory to its rated 3200 MHz speed. After much Maxon CineBench benchmarking and ASUS RealBench stress testing, the 12% CPU performance increase is a good 24/7 overclock using adaptive voltage so I'm happy with it.
 

 
The ASUS Z170-based Pro Gaming series motherboards are really great and could be thought of as a 'Pseudo-ROG' (Republic of Gamers) board due to it's high end feature set, overclocking performance, and beautiful styling - but at a much lower cost. Their Z170i Pro Gaming version doesn't disappoint with its 4-Phase power delivery and VRM heatsinks, making it great for overclocking.

Even though I used the EVGA 650W SuperNova G2 modular power supply there was still a lot of cable routing to contend with. The Phanteks Evolv ITX case gave me plenty of room for cable management behind the motherboard tray. 
 

 
To finish I added some PC lighting bling with a BitFenix Alchemy 2.0 Red Magnetic LED Strip. It really sets it off and looks better in person than in my photographs.
Oh and want to cut down on dust sticking to the inside of your case window? Wipe it off with some Monster ScreenClean! It's a great safe non-alcohol display LCD cleaner you can find online or wherever big screen TV's are sold.
 

 
I'm not using the included ASUS WiFi antenna on top even though it's attached for show, but WiFi is currently disabled. It was only used during the initial Windows 10 setup for Ethernet adapter driver downloads in order for me to be direct connect wired to my Internet cable router. 


 
Your comments and questions are welcome.
 
ASUS RealBench Benchmark scores: Image Editing: 198532 Time: 25.628, Encoding: 180939 Time: 52.99, OpenCL: 100032 KSamples/sec: 2612, Heavy Multitasking: 184933 Time: 52.884, System Score: 146102 (CPUID HWMonitor: 4.5 GHz @ 1.28V, 88.43W, 71c Max Load)
 
CineBench CPU score: 997cb
 
ASUS RealBench 15min StressTest: Passed (CPUID HWMonitor: 4.5 GHz @ 1.28V, 83.73W, 79c Max Load)
 
3DMark Fire Strike: 16,723 (June 2016 @76 F ambient room temp) - http://www.3dmark.com/3dm/12429780
 
3DMark 11: 20,809 (June 2016 @76 F ambient room temp) - http://www.3dmark.com/3dm11/11321018
 
So head on over to my Mod Rigs page at http://www.modsrigs.com/detail.aspx?buildid=35547 and give me some +1's and comments if you like my build as much as I do!
post edited by snmavronis - 2016/06/24 17:49:27

System Specs & Build Photos
PCPartPicker - https://pcpartpicker.com/b/96JV3C
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4 Replies Related Threads

    Dukman
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    Re: "Skylake Evolv ITX Classified" 2016/06/23 06:39:26 (permalink)
    Great looking build with everything nice and neat.  
     
    And thats a great idea for the product badges.  I generally do one of two things.  Throw them in a drawer of stick them on the inside of one of the side panels where they can't be seen.  

    Heatware



     
     
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    XrayMan
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    Re: "Skylake Evolv ITX Classified" 2016/06/23 20:38:24 (permalink)
     
    Good job on the build. Looks great.

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    rjohnson11
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    Re: "Skylake Evolv ITX Classified" 2016/06/25 01:27:43 (permalink)
    Definitely a great looking build

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    snmavronis
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    Re: "Skylake Evolv ITX Classified" 2016/06/27 11:10:59 (permalink)
    Thank you Mods! My favorite part is how the big CLASSIFIED backplate stencil logo stands out loud and proud. :)
     
    EVGA rules. \m/

    System Specs & Build Photos
    PCPartPicker - https://pcpartpicker.com/b/96JV3C
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