Welcome to my adventure in watercooling the strangest set of hardware I’ve ever run!
Today is the start of my build log for the Quake con 2026 case mod competition and the goal of the build is… A manta ray! And to suit the nerd that I am and my childhood love of beast wars/transformers, I will call this build Depth Charge after the manta ray character.
Photo credit: Wikipedia
Background: Hi, I’m Cameron. I go by Arkratos/TheArkratos on most of the internet. I’m a hobbyist case modder. Usually I just enter the Quake con case mod competition because I used to be local to the Dallas/Fort Worth area. I also almost always design my own cases for competitions because no one really makes a case to support the weird things I want to do.
A few months ago I managed to take 1st place in the scratch build category with my computer I call Lost Atlantis. But I have to give credit to the guys that also got 2nd and 3rd place; those guys’ computers were just insane. 2nd place was a professional cosplay-grade shield from the new Doom game. It is also a working chain saw, obviously without “real” blades. It had a pull start that would trigger the blades popping out and rotating! 3rd place was a 160% scale (I believe) portal gun. It was amazing with removable panels, easter eggs in the design, all I can say is it was just phenomenal! Quake con’s Instagram video shows the builds nicely (although a bit quick): https://www.instagram.com/reels/DNJtp1RMqJ_/
So going into next year I decided I want to up the ante: I want to incorporate specifically large motion into the build. I remembered seeing this marvel of engineering from the Cooler Master Case Mod World Series 2018: https://bit-tech.net/features/modding/case-mod/cooler-master-case-mod-world-series-2018-the-winners/7/ The Crescent by ‘CPSM’. This computer has a “pumpless” watercooling system. The entire system rotates to treat the computer like an hourglass: gravity pulls the liquid through the computer from one reservoir to the other and then it rotates to do it again.
Base idea: Long story short, my plan is to take that idea and expand upon it; I’ll make my design not just an engineering experiment, but also something pretty enough my partner won’t hate me for hanging on the wall! So yeah, a manta ray. The wings will be the reservoirs (which hopefully will flap), the computer in the “torso”, and even use the cables as the stinger!
To CAD I go, and I end up with this rough mockup:
During the CAD phase, I start looking for hardware. Obviously I need an ITX motherboard, because with the reservoirs I’m already at around 3 feet wide. I don’t want to include a GPU in the watercooling, because I’m afraid it would complicate the watercooling enough it might not work. If I have a big air-cooled graphics card I kind of feel like the concept is a failure. That’s when it hits me… Strix Halo (Ryzen AI Max+) exists, and that is a beast of a platform that doesn’t need a dedicated GPU to game. So I reached out to Framework after talking with them at PAX West, and they have graciously sponsored this build with their Framework Desktop mainboard.
At this point the mainboard has come in, and I’ve been trying to settle on additional hardware. I believe at this point I have, but I’ll leave that update for another day.
If you are wondering about the tags:
Summary
I will be running Linux, but I still need Windows for Autodesk Fusion… Framework doesn’t support dGPUs but I do have an Intel Arc B50 pro working that I will purely use for virtual machines.






