this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2024
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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by PRUSSIA_x86 to c/buildapc
 

I'm in the process of building a PC and will be moving states next month. Ideally, I'd like to at least get it built and booted up before moving, because I'm moving to a more rural area without easy access to a MicroCenter or other store that sells components. It'll be a ~700 mile drive, the second half of which will be through smaller mountain roads. What is the best way to do this, so I can avoid damaging any components?

Edit: Thanks for the advice everybody, the consensus seems to be to remove and package separately the hard disks, GPU, and anything else heavy that sticks out from the board, then wrap the whole thing in towels and blankets and lay it on its back for the duration of the journey.

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[–] Potatisen 15 points 5 months ago

Keep the box for your case and for your GPU. Pack those two items in their boxes. RAM/PSU/etc should be fine being stuck on the motherboard in the case. If you got a mechanical HDD, might be worth taking that out as well. And like someone else said, anything heavy should come out of the case. Be smart about the placement in the truck as well, put clothes/blankets/pillows under and around the case.

[–] saltesc 8 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

I remove the GPU because it's so heavy and will damage the slot. Then just place it behind the passenger seat in the footwell surrounded by soft stuff (pillows, blankets, towels, etc) and roll the seat back so it's snug and firmly locked in. All you're looking to do is prevent shock. Movement is totally fine, but hitting a big pothole with nothing to absorb isn't ideal.

Safely transporting your panels requires more care. Don't want any pressure or objects to get on the displays. One object slightly moving can press a bezel or rest on the panel 10 miles in and just do damage over time for the next 690.

Edit: Shit, I prob should've mentioned how to transport panels. With as much clear room as possible. Back down, face up, no point covering the screens it'll just put a very false sense of security in. I will put them in the passenger footwell and on the passenger seat. If I have "plenty of room" to fit another box, I do not. They need that room. They are expensive, they are fragile, they are critical. They're like massive exposed motherboards that cost a lot more qnd don't have a PC case protecting them.

[–] Soup 6 points 5 months ago

Remove your GPU, and basically anything that puts weight on the board. With a heavy enough air cooler, if you didn’t want to take it off, I’d probably try to lie it down flat and make sure it’s on something sturdy but soft like a couple towels. That would just mean that it’s not hanging the weight off the board.

I’m not entirely sure about glass sides, if you have it, but I’d take the panel off and keep it safe like you would a mirror. It should be fine either way but if the case flexes funny I dunno how that would play out. If you can’t make it work then it’s probably fine but that might be the best bet.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Remove the GPU, and if you have a large tower cooler the cooler and wrap them up in bubble wrap and package them separately.

If it will fit nicely wrap up the GPU and just stick it inside the case. Just make sure that it cannot move at all.

[–] PRUSSIA_x86 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Thanks, is there any chance of static from the bubblewrap causing any shorts on the motherboard? I'll probably just wait to install the GPU until after I move then, no sense unpacking it and immediately repackaging it if everything else runs smoothly.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago

Is there a chance? Yes, will it destroy anything? Probably not. Just wrap the GPU back up in the anti static bag it ships in and everything else has the entire case to dissipate the charge.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

Static-safe bubble wrap. You don't want an electrical insulator rubbing against your components for a few hundred miles.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 months ago

I moved over 4000 miles away with overseas shipping on a pallet that traveled about half the distance in a truck by land.

Here is how I did it:

GPU in its original box since that was made for sea shipping.

HDDs taken out, wrapped in foam, and put in boxes.

Other components stayed in the case, but the case was filled with large air pocket packing material to support the air cooling block. Computer was then put in the original case box and stored with the orientation of the cooling block vertical. The side to side movement is eliminated with the packing material and less stress was placed. Safer yet would be to remove the cooler if it is air.

If you have a glass side panel, make sure it is surrounded by packing material.

That is it! Everything arrived in perfect condition except for some books which got wet from the humid saltwater air in an enclosed space.

[–] Contramuffin 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Size matters. I built a small form factor pc exactly because I knew I would probably move it a lot. I find that 10-15 L cases can be fit into a large backpack with some care, and 8 L cases can be fit into backpacks relatively easily.

You probably won't need it to fit into a backpack, but regardless, you will probably want to remove any unnecessary space to make carrying and transport easier. For what it's worth, I believe 15 L cases can generally fit into luggages, and I would be more inclined to trust that a PC is undamaged if left in a luggage. Especially if the remaining space is well padded

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

The NR200 is a 17L case, and it will definitely fit in smaller luggage. Only thing you'd need to brace or consider packing is the GPU.

[–] anamethatisnt 3 points 5 months ago

If you have a dGPU i would save the packaging it came in and reuse it. They are heavy enough to damage a pcie slot. Other than that its the usual soft packaging inside hard packaging. Put a seatbelt on it if you got the space in the backseat.