I don't, no. Like I said, it was a friend's system, and I'm not sure on what he was working with, at the time. I haven't looked into mATX cases at all since that time period, so I really have no idea on where cut-outs lie, with parts today.Treblaine said:10lbs ain't bad, it ain't light but it's on par with a games console.rmb1983 said:Maybe about 6-7 lbs. It was about five years ago, so I'll look for a link of a similar model, since I'm going to assume the precise one has been discontinued for ages.Treblaine said:Nice, I haven't actually ever seen an EZ-Bake Oven (I live in the UK), but google says they're about 7.88 X 15.88 X 8.56 (I presume inches) I hope it didn't heat up like an oven!rmb1983 said:Alternatively, you can also opt for mATX cases, if you're willing to go that route. One that immediately comes to mind is something a friend of mine had a few years ago; we called it his EZ-Bake PC (it was about the exact size of the EZ-Bake Oven toy). It decreases the flexibility you'd get from a desktop, due to some size constraints (particularly with your GPU), but does make toting it around quite a bit less of a hassle.Something around that size wouldn't be bad.
But any idea how much you EZ-PC weighed?
Something like that would mainly be competing with something like an Xbox 360 that is about 4.5kg (32lbs) with the power brick.
EDIT: Very similar to this [http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=60089], with the exception that his was originally purple and flat-gray (hence our token name for it), and he ended up disassembling and re-painting it. So, about 10 lbs, then.
As far as the EZ-Bake Oven [http://www.thecookinginn.com/tciimages/hasbro_oven2.jpg], on the other hand...This is the model I seem to recall from the 80's. A couple cousins had them; I can't comment on what the food turned out like. Boys and girls at that age, you know.
Got a spec sheet to follow. Like did you use a small factor PSU, what sized GPUs are cut out and could you still squeeze in a disc drive.
At the time, though, some of the higher-end nVidia and ATI GPUs had an arbitrary size restriction, in that they were simply too long for the case itself. A couple of them fit snugly, but that was a whole different bag of marbles; you'd end up choosing a lesser performance or costlier card simply to accommodate. There wasn't much in way of motherboard selection for mATX that was worthwhile at the time, either, so that presented another issue. He managed to build a fairly decent system, as far as the PC games we were playing at the time, but it did limit his options.