Wall mounted PC on Ikea Skådis pegboard
thingiverse
This is a set that allows wall mounting your PC on an Ikea Skådis pegboard. I designed the pieces so that the board can already be on a wall when installing the PC, so there's no screws from the backside etc., which would've otherwise been a sturdier solution for fixing these in place. But this way it's more in line in how the pegboards are supposed to work.Parts included (for now):mini-ITX motherboardGPU mounted vertically on a riser cable (screw holes for 3 slots)PSU (HDPLEX 400W HiFi DC-ATX + AC-DC combo)power button (the very basic cheap one)As a bonus there's a piece to add an extra support hole for a hook in the bottom row, since in my arrangement I found the smallest Skådis I have was a tad too small.Might add later:some kind of an SSD mountmounting for an FLEX ATX PSU or for an SFX unit (though I don't have one), since admittedly the HDPLEX is quite niche and partly discontinued nowNOTES FOR INDIVIDUAL PARTS:Motherboard:The fitment is tight in all the ways, you need to squash the M3 standoffs in by force and secure with a countersunk screw from the backside. I recommend using metal ones. Probably non-countersunk would've been stronger but this is how I happened to make it. The pegs are separate parts for easier printing without supports and for optimal orientation for strength (though now it depends on how well the glue holds) so they need to be glued in their respective holes (again a tight fit), which I designed so that I they couldn't be accidentally glued facing the wrong direction. I used basic CA glue and so far it's up there. The four pegs at top is probably more than needed but brings more peace for the mind. Finally the pegs fit quite tightly in the holes of the board, but that makes the motherboard install easier, as otherwise the pieces could fall off before everything is fixed with the motherboard.GPU:I designed this with the current heavy and expensive graphics cards in mind, so there are now three separate pieces keeping it in place, in case one of them fails. I would believe (hope) it is strong enough (my card isn't that large). The top of the bracket is placed between two of the hooks and then all three screwed together with M3 screws and nuts. The PCIE riser cable holder again has separate hooks to be glued in the back and the main piece also has a place for the bottom of the bracket to slide in. There's indents at the back for M3 heat set inserts to enforce the riser connection, though I don't have a soldering iron (yet) so I just screwed it in the plastic and it seems to hold like that too.In case your riser cable is too long like mine was, I also designed a clean 180 degree bend holder, which I added as a separate model as it's not a pegboard thing:https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:6253801Power button:Quite self explanatory, see the picture. You need one of those very basic buttons in it, which are small and cheap. Optionally use something else, like those keycap buttons you can get from Amazon/Aliexpress etc.PSU:This one doesn't have separate pegs since I was lazy to convert it to one after I realised it. Thus it needs some supports when printing and the layer direction isn't optimal for strength, but it still works ok. It has two models, the actual mounting which is identical for both ends and therefore printed twice, and an optional piece that you can add to the bottom and it locks the whole system so that it shouldn't be able to be pulled out. But as said the locking piece is actually quite unnecessary and I put the contraption up without it, since it needs longer screws which I didn't have. For all the screw holes there's a M3 square nut place in the backside.
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