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You're close :P It's a Gateway, and I got pre-built only because, for the price, it was a really good deal then, and still is. And if I get a new case, I'd need a new motherboard too, since that's the problem, and the motherboard is really what makes the thing BTX.AbyssKnightOr you could drill new holes into your new case.
I do repairs on PCs for a living I wouldn't recomend ripping off the keyboard and mouse block. The results could be bad catostrophic bad. It may still work but it also may fry every component attached to the motherboard. That would be the whole computer. If you can return the card you may look for a different brand of card that has more clearance in that area.pcdebol
I dont see how it would be that bad, I've ripped ports off before and it never hurt anything. (but please correct me if im wrong)
I think as long as you remove it carefully, and clean the area, it should be ok. but dont hold me responsible.
When you put a soldering iron on the board you can damage 1 of the layers and crash the whole board.(because you got the wrong part too hot) If you don't have the right tools to remove the old solder you run a real chance of creating a short by getting solder somwhere it shouldn't be. If you just yank it off, the board itself will break most of the time before the block comes loose. Also a circuit is ending at that block depending on how the manufacturer laid out the board it may or may not run after you pull it.
I learned most of this by either doing it or fixing the mess after someone else tried and had me put the pieces back together.
I didn't say it wouldn't work I just said I would recomend against it because your running a 50 50 proposition at best. Believe it or not if you scratch your board (not even that deep) in the wrong spot it can die. The manufactures claim a simple static shock can kill the board, I haven't seen it happen but I have talked to people who have.
Don't get me wrong I've broken out the hack saw and dremmel plenty of times. But I have cooked one or two to many boards trying to get that extra eigth inch of clearance. When I do this it is in my repair room and usually on an old computer which I have about twenty of laying about right now, and the stack is growing. If I find something that works with consistancy I'll do it on newer stuff.
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