Skystar320 wrote on 2022-04-08, 10:05:
In Australia we saw a lot of them around 1993 to 1995, 386 up to 486DX2 systems.
OK, then Australians had significantly better taste or different budget priorities.
For, after the whole "AMD 386DX-40" flood in the early 90s, many OEM seem to have rapidly reduced the complexity and quality of secondary components like cases.
Meaning, more often than not, I met desktop and tower cases that had the bare U-shaped sheet metal that somehow had to be fumbled under the plastic front panel with a prayer and then screwed into place.
Some later AT cases are frankly hideous.
The flip top is basically the PC equivalent of the quick release bolts on the hood of the Shelby GT:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:%276 ... _2010).jpg
- quick access to all the components without any tools.
Nice to have.
If not that, it might be a matter of opinion, but to me, the type that combines the U-shaped cover with the front panel already constitutes a step forward for desktops.
There's some fumbling on the last inch with some of the outer drive frames, when closing it, yes. (one has to fix the drives very precisely)
But despite the fella I linked to even poopooing the venerable "Moretec" case, I think it helps that you merely need to pull it off half-way to access the cards.
And when closed, it pretty much stays put, even without the screws.
I have a very old one of that type, still with the large PSU with integrated big red power switch to the side. Says "Sunny" on the front and the inside is matte black, for whatever reason that used to be cool back then.
The attachment Sunny_Cx486_desktop.jpg is no longer available
Plus, optically, that Moretec was basically the Bauhaus among late 80s baroque. I mean, some of the 286 and 386 era cases with their weird pseydo-functional off-color ornaments and Star-Wars-spaceship-like elements - just NO. You don't win retro by contracting eye cancer.
Also,
davidrg wrote on 2022-04-08, 10:19:
Yes, that is some nice shell. And hell, is that thing new?
Only needs the LED display to be perfect.