Monday, October 25th 2021
SilverStone Intros SUGO 16 Cube-Type Mini-ITX Case
SilverStone introduced the SUGO 16, a cube-shaped compact Mini-ITX case, designed for gaming PCs. Available in black (model: SST-SG16B) and white (SST-SG16W) variants, the case measures 200 mm (W) x 232 mm (H) x 280 mm (D), dry-weighing 2.66 kg. It serves up room for a Mini-ITX or Mini-DTX motherboard with up to two expansion slots. A cut-out in the front lets you easily slide in your graphics card, to which the case offers a maximum clearance of 27.5 cm (14.7 cm max height). The case gives you a choice of using either an ATX or an SFX PSU. When using an ATX PSU, the maximum CPU cooler height is 8.5 cm (enough for an AIO block or low-profile fan-heatsinks); but if an SFX PSU is used, you get room for up to 17.2 cm cooler height, which is plenty for tower-type coolers.
Using an SFX power supply also creates room for a single-fan radiator to be mounted along the case's front fan vent. The PSU bay opens out toward the front, hidden behind the front panel. An AC extension leads to a receptacle at the back. The rear has a 120 mm fan vent that can hold either a 120 mm rear exhaust fan, or a 3.5-inch HDD, or a 2.5-inch SSD (as mounts). Internally, there's just the one 2.5-inch bay. Behind the motherboard tray, there's a strategically located cutout letting you access the M.2-2280 slot that's typically located at the reverse side of the PCB for modern Mini-ITX motherboards. The SilverStone SUGO 16 is expected to go on sale later this week in Asia, at a price roughly equivalent to USD $90. It will reach Europe and North America in December.
Using an SFX power supply also creates room for a single-fan radiator to be mounted along the case's front fan vent. The PSU bay opens out toward the front, hidden behind the front panel. An AC extension leads to a receptacle at the back. The rear has a 120 mm fan vent that can hold either a 120 mm rear exhaust fan, or a 3.5-inch HDD, or a 2.5-inch SSD (as mounts). Internally, there's just the one 2.5-inch bay. Behind the motherboard tray, there's a strategically located cutout letting you access the M.2-2280 slot that's typically located at the reverse side of the PCB for modern Mini-ITX motherboards. The SilverStone SUGO 16 is expected to go on sale later this week in Asia, at a price roughly equivalent to USD $90. It will reach Europe and North America in December.
29 Comments on SilverStone Intros SUGO 16 Cube-Type Mini-ITX Case
Hell, it even gives you an option of completely blocking airflow with a HDD ))) Oh, yeah... Especially if you have a card without backplate. But looking at that power cable I don't think there's any other way to insert the card (unless it's a short ITX model and you have long and slim fingers) That's only if you install an SFX PSU(they don't even include an adapter backplate). And judging by their pics - it's even worse. Basically that tower HS will blow hot air on the front plate of the PSU, and that's assuming your cables ain't on the way.
The article is wrong about there being drive mounts on the external fan mount as well. I would assume you can install your GPU from the side as is normal in cases like this, though the front cut-out makes that a lot easier if you're pushing the bounds of what can fit in the case - which is likely to happen in current designs. And that cutout is big enough that you'd need to be really clumsy to damage anything by putting the card through it.
Also, a tower heatsink will not be blowing air at the PSU whatsoever, unless you go for some weird reversed airflow setup. It will be blowing air out the back of the case.
The only weird thing here is the PSU exhaust next to the case intake, which definitely isn't ideal, but with the types of builds this can fit (not likely to exceed 300W in real-world loads), I wouldn't call that an issue. An extra 30W of heat dumped into the case under load isn't going to change much. Quite a common feature on small ITX cases where GPU length is an issue. The opening means you have tons more leeway in getting the card into place without scraping it against the front of the case during installation. See the Ncase M1, CM NR200P, etc.
My old LianLi had a bit more space in it, along with a big-ass 140mm intake fan, and it still managed to suffocate my i3-6100+GTX1060 throughout summer. And remember, that's a 51W CPU which never boosts past its claimed PL, and a GPU that ran at 80% PL and a custom fan curve (to compensate for heat, even in idle). Must be one helluva invisible backplate, then :D :D :D
Or maybe it's intentional, for "improved airflow"
\o/
Looks like a successor to the SG05/SG06/SG13 that we've had for years. I am a little concerned about the PSU layout. Regardless of which orientation you mount the PSU in, you're still going to have the PSU exhausting heat directly into the same front-panel void that the intake fan is going to be in, effectively dumping warm/hot air into the wrong place.
I also went to Silverstonetek.com and noticed they have an updated Sugo 15 which accommodates a layout like the SG05/SG06/SG13 but with longer GPU support.
edit: looking at manual, I'd probably build this to back to front airflow and maybe flip PSU to pull air from the inside
Another option with a dual-fan GPU up against the top mesh is to use the GPU's dual fans as intakes and exhaust out of both the front AND back. Intake/exhaust airflow is roughly balanced then and you're not fighting the PSU's exhaust. A PSU will dump out 25W of heat for a typical midrange CPU+GPU build. Not much heat - as you point out - but if you can avoid sucking it back into the case without compromising anything else then you probably should.
What I would like to see: a build with a high powered GPU and a high-ish-end CPU, cooled by a custom loop with a thick rad in the front (with push+pull fans? I think that should fit) and a thinner rad in the back, with both rads exhausting. 240mm of radiator area isn't much for a high end build, but it's sufficient with some tuning. Would definitely be interesting, and at 12.9 litres this would be pretty dense too.
But lets wait for the TPU review.
The case is 280mm long. Subtract 5mm on the rear for various panels and protrusions and 30mm on the front for that front panel, and you have a ~245mm internal length. ITX motherboards are 170mm; SFX PSUs are 100mm long, SFX-L PSUs are 125mm long. That means an SFX PSU will overhang the edge of the motherboard by ~25mm and an SFX-L PSU will overhang by ~50mm. Accounting for modular connectors adding another 15mm or so, SFX should have no issues at all as long as the HSF doesn't overhang the RAM, while SFX-L will be a squeeze, and likely only suited for water cooling. The pictured PSU is Silverstone's SX750, which is standard SFX. As with any SFF build you need to be aware of component clearances and think through your build with this, but other than that I don't see this being an actual problem.
This is definitely not a case you really want to use a tower cooler with. AIO or top-down cooler (even the Wraith Prism would do the job). A 92mm tower will probably fit just fine but you're going to be routing PSU cables around it enough that its airflow is going to be hindered by all the cables anyway.
Even a 92mm tower will intrude into vertical front-to-back plane of an SFX PSU by a few mm, forcing you to mount the cooling fan on the other side, unless you can clip the fan lower down the heatsink and miss the top few fins.
In terms of the side-to-side plane of a 100mm-long SFX PSU, there are at most 26mm* of clearance to the front face of a tower cooler. That's not enough for a modular 24-pin cable diameter, it's connector plug, and a minimum bend radius of >0 but depending on where the 24-pin cables exit the PSU you can probably avoid contacting the heatsink by flipping the PSU orientation. Same goes for semi-modular PSUs where the 24-pin cables come out of one side, which will make clearance guaranteed, but only in one of the two fan orientations.
*I did the math based on Silverstone's stated dimensions, two mITX boards I have lying around with IO-edge-to-center-of-CPU-socket dimensions of 89 and 93mm respectively, and a 40mm wide 92mm tower that has height 125mm. For unstated dimensions (ie, difference between internal/external dimensions) I used an empty SG13 I have kicking around behind my desk to estimate front panel depth and rear expansion tab overhang.
Still, as I said, I see AIOs or 2x120mm rad custom loops as the best solution for this case, in which case it could do some pretty impressively dense builds. I definitely wouldn't be putting a high wattage CPU (5800X or above, any i7 or above) in there on air without expecting to do some undervolting and/or downclocking. The Alta is pretty cool, but it is 2.5x the volume of this, so it's not quite in the same class :) How is the Era treating you? Those were pretty universally panned in reviews from what I saw - really pretty, but terrible thermals compared to the SFF competition. Really like the design though, I hope they make a v2 at some point.