Build Your Own No-Compromises $1,500 PC
10. Connect the Umbilical Cords
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The CM Stacker comes with a generous six front-mounted USB ports. Fortunately, the MSI P35 Neo 2–FR has enough USB headers to run them. To connect them, find the three USB cables in the Stacker case. Each is keyed, so they cannot be installed incorrectly. Plug them into the JUSB1, JUSB2, and JUSB3 mobo headers (image A). Now use the SATA cable that came with the mobo to attach your hard drive. Simply plug one end into an available purple port on the mobo and plug the other end into the drive (image B). One caveat: A SATA connector is delicate. Once you have it in place, do not put pressure on it or you may snap it; this can be fatal, especially if you snap the connector on the drive. You might notice that one of our budget board’s flaws is the inconveniently located SATA ports. With a long GPU in place, two of the SATA ports are blocked. You can get around this by purchasing a right-angle SATA cable, but that will work for only one of the ports. Fortunately, there’s an additional SATA port, and you’ll find two eSATA ports on the back of the motherboard. Now get the IDE ribbon cable that came with your mobo and use it to attach your optical drive—there’s only one slot on the motherboard into which it can fit.
11. Finish off the Front Panel
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Remember in Kung Fu how Caine had to grab a pebble from the old man’s hand to prove how badass he was? Well, installing a computer’s front-panel connectors is kind of like that. Only after years of study and apprenticeship will you be able to plug in the front-panel connectors without getting it wrong at least once. Nevertheless, we’ll try to do it right here. Grab the rainbow cable with the Power SW, HDD LED, Reset SW, and Power LED connectors and take a close look at the front-panel header. You’ll notice that the yellow header is color-coded and also features a plus symbol on the positive connector (image A). The motherboard manual will spell out where each cable goes, but since the board follows the Intel FP connector standard, we know that the power switch connects to black, the power LED connects to green, reset goes to blue, and the hard drive LED goes to red. The orientation of the power-on and reset switches don’t matter, but you’ll have to match the positive and negative with the LED indicators. If you do it wrong, don’t worry; there’s no risk of destroying anything. We got it right on the first shot, however, because our kung fu is that strong (image B).