At CES this year, Digital Storm introduced its new compact PC design that weds a small form-factor with a specially-designed liquid cooling system. The BOLT X is designed to enable a significant overclocking potential of components even in a space-constrained form-factor, and it should benefit those who need to have maximum performance in a minimum footprint.

Over the past few years we have observed the culmination of several separate trends: compact computers with liquid cooling, with style and with serious overclocking capabilities. The new BOLT X from Digital Storm is the company’s next-generation SFF PC with a HydroLux LCS that features a number of upgrades aimed to advance its cooling performance  as well as improve the system in general. First off, the BOLT X has two 140-mm top mounted fans (up from two 120-mm fans in case of the BOLT 3, the predecessor). Second, it comes with an integrated stand that helps to minimize the amount of dust it sucks in through openings for cool air on the bottom. Third, it features a simplified open layout to make it easier to upgrade and service the PC.

Just like the predecessors, the Digital Storm BOLT X can accommodate a Mini-ITX motherboard and one graphics card located beneath the mainboard to ensure proper cooling and compatibility with custom cards that have tall PCBs. With the BOLT X, Digital Storm will offer the Intel Z270-based platforms (so, they will support technologies like NVMe, Thunderbolt 3, USB 3.1 Gen 2, 802.11 ac Wi-Fi, etc.) along with various Intel Core processors powered by the Kaby Lake microarchitecture. As for GPUs, expect the PC maker to offer the latest graphics cards that will be available with its BOLT X — NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 10-series for now and whatever comes up next.

At present, Digital Storm does not discuss the exact number of SSDs/HDDs that can be housed by the BOLT X chassis, but the PC will definitely support one high-performance M.2 SSD with a PCIe 3.0 x4 interface on the motherboard as well as a number of storage devices in a 2.5-inch form-factor. Following the latest trends, the boutique PC maker eliminated the ODD from the chassis completely, resulting in a perfectly flat front surface.

One of the intrigues of the new BOLT X system is its PSU. In theory, Digital Storm can install almost any SFX power supply inside (except, perhaps, the SFX-L versions) to improve overclocking potential and/or support power hungry components. However, with the BOLT 3 the company only offers 400 W PSUs.

Digital Storm will start selling BOLT X systems in the first quarter. Exact pricing will depend on actual configuration and will thus vary. At present, the company offers BOLT 3 systems starting at $1906, so the new versions are likely to start at approximately the same price-point.

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Source: Digital Storm

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  • Sttm - Friday, January 13, 2017 - link

    Why is it so narrow and tall? I like my towers not to tip over.
  • ckbryant - Friday, January 13, 2017 - link

    They named it Bolt-X so you have to Bolt-X down to the desk or floor to keep it from flipping over lol
  • ddriver - Friday, January 13, 2017 - link

    Good point, but I don't see a bolting bracket with it. Back to the drawing board for this one.
  • ddriver - Sunday, January 15, 2017 - link

    They could at least make it even thinner, being water-cooled and all. Then you could just hang it on the wall and don't worry about knocking it over and breaking it. From the looks of it, much is currently wasted space. If they have a custom psu in there they could have scrapped the casing so it doesn't add bulk. Then the whole unit could be like 2 inches thick.
  • trulyuncouth - Sunday, January 15, 2017 - link

    It is meant to hold a graphics card. Did you even read the article?
  • ddriver - Monday, January 16, 2017 - link

    Your point being?

    The graphics card is obviously NOT perpendicular to the motherboard as it would be in a traditional setup, from the looks of it, it might be actually collinear, so its z profile should not be any taller than the mobo + cpu + water block and pipes. It is the psu and radiator that prevent it from being any thinner.
  • DanNeely - Monday, January 16, 2017 - link

    A horizontal radiator would make it even taller and thinner and more likely to tip over if stood on a desk; while as still being a 2+" thick brick it'd still be on the really chunky side for a wall mount. Aside from that, making it that thin would also require using something like a 1U rackmount PSU; the 40mm fans in those are obscenely loud and completely unacceptable for residential use.
  • ddriver - Tuesday, January 17, 2017 - link

    2" is about the thickness of a classical (as in old school) painting frame. As for the cooling - sure tiny fans are garbage, but there is also the option to actually do something innovative and put a long cylindrical blower like the ones they put in ac units. That's gonna move a whole lot of air at very low noise.
  • DavidBrees - Saturday, January 14, 2017 - link

    So you can see the components. Short and wide would hide or at least compress the components.
  • CrazyElf - Saturday, January 14, 2017 - link

    Compounding the problem, the AIO with the reservoir and radiator are on top. Those can be heavy.

    The power supply looks pretty high up too.

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