I love to render both by hand and by computer. The main constraint with my computer rendering lately has been speed. I am pushing towards an animation on my thesis project and any time I do side projects I find that there literally are not enough hours in the day to do all the rendering required of me. Therefore I decided to build a render farm....basically a box with lots of computers inside of it.
This has been done before. You can build a render farm the expensive way by buying a 'rack' system. But that adds up. Or you can do it the crazy way where you make a home made render farm. That's the path I chose. It's cheap and it's got style!
So a friend of mine tipped me off to this idea. Basically you get a cool little Ikea drawer cabinet called the Helmer and you stick sheets of cardboard or whatever at the base of the drawers and you put your motherboard on top of it with all its components. It's a genius idea and people have been doing iterations of this for a while. The problem I was running into, though, was that unlike the other Helmer builds I had seen, I wanted to overclock mine. This meant more space was required for the cooler. Also I had trouble finding a 7.6" wide MicroATX motherboard that could overclock well.
I currently run a home built desktop that sports a 2600k and an EVGA 580, both watercooled. I thought about doing that but the logistics of pulling drawers in and out with that stiff, 3/4" tubing nixed it for me. Also there was the cost of the waterblocks, the radiator, etc. I wanted to keep this cheap!
To start out with, let me show you a picture of the Helmer in it's stock, unmodified condition:
http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/40107872/
Fortunately for me my dad is an amateur machinist. Over Christmas break I mentioned to him that I was trying to resolve some issues with how I was going to fit all my nodes in the cabinet and get all the parts and pieces to fit. I also mentioned that I wanted to overclock and was thinking of reducing the density from 6 nodes per cabinet to 3. My thought was since the cabinets are so cheap, better to increase the value of your nodes by overclocking even if it means losing space. So we settled on 2 drawers per node giving us 3 nodes per cabinet.
Here are some pictures showing the process:
So that's it! That's the Helmer as a ridiculously deluxe render farm. It was a three week process, but a lot of that was the 'invention' of this beast. There are a huge number of problems to be resolved when you actually start the project. Also both my dad and I got colds during that time, did holiday related activities, built furniture, chopped firewood, etc. So it wasn't our full time job in other words. Feel free to post comments with questions or feedback. My render time now has dropped to 1/3 of what it was. I expect it to drop to 1/4 when the third node is complete. If you feel like donating the CPU, HDD and Ram for the last node don't hesitate to let me know....
And for your convenience, here is a list of typical hardware per node:
Hardware List:
Asrock Z77 Pro3 Motherboard
Intel 2600k oc\ed to 4.5ghz
Intel 330 60gb hard drive
32gb Ripjaw Ram
Cooler Master 212 Plus CPU cooler
Lots of Cooler Master Case Fans
A basic Gigabit Switch
A basic 550watt power supply