In the final version, there is a bridge in the coutout in the top right. The motherbaord-tray still needed some holes so i could bolt it to the original standoffs, cutouts for cables to go through and to safe some weight, of course. So I adapted my CAD file to the changes and redid the backplate.Īfter cutting that again, it was time to mill the edges to fit flush with the original backplate, again.Īnd getting the PCI-slotbracket in place with epoxy, again. The cutout for the fans in the back of the case needed to be a fear mm to the right. Turns out, it didnt fit (Spoiler, the final version isn't fitting perfectly either) Templates were printed and Aluminium was cut ( buy Hand/Jigsaw. While I waited for the Aluminium sheets to arrive, the design for motherboard-tray and rear io plate was going great. I got strayed into the teardown, i found a leaking Liquidcooler-Unit and some parts with water damage.Īfter everything got unscrewed and taken out of the case, it was time to take mesurements. Since the guy I bought the G5 from sad that it didnt turn on, I didnt even try. Just because I saw this Linus guy and the LTT-Team build their HackPro. If there's a specific step that's getting you stuck, let me know and I might be able to jog my memory further.About two month back, I purchased an old cheap Apple Power Mac G5. I then was able to dislodge it and take it out fully. I got it out by pushing upward on the underside and rotating the tray somewhat within the chassis. At this point.I think the tray was free (it's hard to remember exactly). After those were out, I removed two philips screws along the front and another two along the back of the tray. There were about 10 (+/-) torx screws that hold the underside of the shelf that needed removed. With the rod out of the picture, I started removing the shelf itself. At this point I believe the rod was free and with some maneuvering, I got it out. I then removed the four door latch pieces from the rod (they just slide out when the clips are removed) and unscrewed the four torx screws on the bottom of the shelf that hold the rod in place. That involved removing the "e-clip" from the pin in the latch, the pin itself, and the four "spring clips" that hold the door latches onto the latching rod. Next, I removed the door latching mechanism from the shelf. I'm not sure if the upper divider is necessary to remove to get the shelf out, but I wanted it removed regardless. So between wrench, dremel, and chisel, I finally got that out after much labor. It had some nuts to remove, but also some rivets IIRC.
The first part I removed was the metal divider bracket that is between the optical drive and power supply. Mahdiy85, the first thing I did to take the shelf out was remove everything removable from the chassis (brackets, cabling, etc). (sorry about the quality of the pics, I only had my cell phone with me.) Several reinforced cutoff wheels later, we have this result. Once the tray arrived, I marked the rear panel of the case with my sharpie and went to work cutting it out with the dremel.
I decided to go with this tray, from mountain mods in the 2x80mm configuration. Once I got to this point, I decided to order an aluminum ATX motherboard tray to use, basically replacing the Mac Pro's rear panel. This required removing the cabling, covers/panels, and the "divider shelf" between the top and bottom of the case. To start off modding, I stripped the case down to just the enclosure.
Hopefully the mod will be unique and turn out well.
It looks like almost all other Mac Pro mods I've seen have been conversions to MATX or are ATX, but don't allow multiple video cards. Since I have a P6T Deluxe V2 and am running SLI, I will be converting the case to ATX, with all 7 slots available for use. I plan to transfer the parts I currently have into the Mac Pro case when done with the mod.
I got a Mac Pro case for free that was "damaged" (power button came loose, easy fix) and have decided to make it into an ATX pc case, since I think it's a cool looking case. Hello all fellow modders and enthusiasts.