Background information

Our second test setup: The Poor Man's Testbench

Kevin Hofer
15.5.2020
Translation: machine translated

Testing new hardware takes time - a lot of time. When several products are launched at the same time and they need to be compared with their predecessors, the time required is all the greater. At digitec, we currently only have one test bench. We need a second one quickly.

The Poor Man's Testbench

As a CAD beginner, I don't immediately set to work designing my own testbench, but first have a look around Thinigverse - an open database for CAD files. I find what I'm looking for straight away: "the poor man's computer testbench", as its creator Romanizer calls it, fulfils my requirements:

  • Easy and quick to build
  • Small, as I am currently testing in my home office
  • Thought through

Printing and screwing

The instructions from Romanizer are brilliant. While I order the parts for my printer, I have the wood cut to size at the DIY store. Printing takes about twelve hours and I can pick up the wood a day later. I still have screws at home.

Within ten minutes, I have assembled the testbench and am ready for testing. It's so easy, why should I get a second, "real" benchtable? I don't have much space at home, where I'm currently testing, so the size of the Poor Man's Testbench suits me just fine.

Of course, I can't attach an AIO or custom water cooling system to the Poor Man's Testbench. But it is possible on both sides of my existing testbench. So I could simply attach an AIO there and connect it to the DIY test bench in the same place. The part is the perfect addition to the existing setup. This means I can swap components even more quickly and easily.

That's what I'm doing now. Namely chips of the tenth Intel core generation on the MSI MPG Z490 Gaming Edge Wifi motherboard and the new testbench. You can read about their performance next week.

24 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

From big data to big brother, Cyborgs to Sci-Fi. All aspects of technology and society fascinate me.


Gaming
Follow topics and stay updated on your areas of interest

Background information

Interesting facts about products, behind-the-scenes looks at manufacturers and deep-dives on interesting people.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Background information

    3D printers made from old drives: an experiment that failed late in the game

    by Kevin Hofer

  • Background information

    CAD-Tetris in the tube radio

    by Kevin Hofer

  • Background information

    The masterpiece is finished: Jessi on her first self-built PC

    by Kevin Hofer