My second Toaster PC build. One side has an RGB fan grill and dust filter to allow airflow for the 1050ti, and the other side has a Cooler Master G100M sticking out.
The G100M unfortunately couldn't fit in the toaster without modifications. I think I did an okay job with the shapes here, but to be honest I know I could have made it look better. I think I should have figured something else out, what do you think of the end design?
Ryzen FTW! None of these buttons are still functional anymore but the lever does of course turn the PC on, and the motherboard lights shine out the bottom at the front.
Pictured here next to my own toaster PC, back when I was using that case. It's also posted on builds.gg if you want to check it out!
The frame of this build is basically a piece of acrylic with the motherboard on one side and the GPU on the other side. The central piece is attached to another base piece of acrylic which screws in between the stock toaster base and the top "shell" piece.
The custom back face with all the I/O ports screw into these motherboard standoffs in the acrylic frame.
Before cable management.
After cable management. The PSU uses a right angle power cable and routes out the bottom to the back, just like the original toaster did before I, uh, repurposed it.
The custom rear panel is a piece of sheet metal that I cut, bent, and wrapped in carbon fiber vinyl
A piece of vinyl-wrapped wood between the base acrylic and the toaster shell raises the shell high enough to accommodate the ITX motherboard. The RGB fan grill mounts directly in the toaster shell. Here you can also see the riser cable that runs behind the motherboard to plug in the GPU, and the custom on lever I built out of aluminum frame, bits of the actual toaster lever, and a momentary power switch.
Baby Toaster PC
This 2-slot toaster PC was a mod I built a little while after I built my 1080ti toaster beast, and was a commission for a friend who saw my first toaster and really liked it. In hindsight, I way way overbuilt this computer for his needs (web browsing, photo storage, and light video editing) and I probably should have just used a 2400G, but on the plus side he's not going to need to upgrade anytime soon. He loved the final product, and while I know I could have done a few things cleaner (especially if I had had the space from not using a dedicated graphics card), I'm pretty happy with how it turned out too. I can't upload videos to this platform, but yes, the toast lever does turn it on!