

Hence, it should be possible to build a fairly powerful PC using the Ola. In its press materials, Cryorig shows off its Ola chassis with NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1080 graphics card, which consumes up to 180 W. The 100 W limitation is likely conditioned by supported cooling system, which cannot be higher than 72 – 82 mm and its top cannot be larger than 92×92 mm. Components like CPU and GPU will have to use their own cooling solutions.Īt present, Cryorig does not reveal anything about the maximum TDP of a GPU that the Ola chassis can house, but claims that the maximum TDP of its CPU should not be higher than 100 W, which is enough for non-overclocked Intel Core i7 K-series processors in LGA1151 packaging, but which does not give any headroom for overclocking. Inside, Cryorig’s Ola has a rather sophisticated internal cooling system that relies on one big 140 mm fan and two shark-gill like side air intake ducts (one for each compartment) that run the length of the case and let in cool air from the outside. The chassis is divided into two compartments: one for the motherboard with the CPU as well as storage devices, another for the graphics card. The Cryorig Ola PC chassis can house an SFX power supply unit, a motherboard in mini-ITX form-factor, a typical full-height high-end graphics card (up to 280 mm in length), one 3.5” HDD as well as one or two 2.5” storage devices. Ola: Designed for Gamers, Inspired by Mac Pro In addition, Cryorig announced its ultra-slim desktop chassis called Taku. The Ola PC case will only hit the market in 2017. While the chassis can formally support a variety of components, actual capabilities of such PCs will be limited by PSUs and cooling. The new case can house one graphics card and a mini-ITX motherboard. Cryorig has announced its new cylindrical PC chassis, which enables system makers and enthusiasts to build Mac Pro-styled gaming computers.
