Skip to main content

This gaming PC inside a vintage radio is truly amazing

Here’s a truly unusual PC build. It’s a gaming PC inside a vintage 1940s Motorola radio case. And believe it or not, the thing actually works!

YouTuber Carter Hurd, who goes by AltaPowderDog on Reddit, is no stranger to builds that are off the beaten path. He’s built a PC tower out of concrete, 3D printed a stainless steel watch, and water-cooled a laptop.

A pc inside a vintage wooden Motorola radio case with a stainless steel fan at the front, surrounded by green leaves.
image: Carter Hurd

Hurd is an engineer and inventor by trade, with a background in robotics and automotive sensing technologies. Today, he considers himself an artist, and after watching a few of his YouTube videos, it’s hard to argue with him. This latest vintage PC build tops everything he’s done thus far.

“I’ve built a number of weird computers on this channel,” Hurd says at the end of his video about this vintage PC build. “But this is my favorite.”

The build features vintage wood, stainless steel, and leather instead of plastic. It eschews RGB lighting for a plasma tube. There’s even an old-style mini fan front and center to draw in fresh air.

Better than the CyberDeck? Wood and Leather Gaming PC Build

The specs on the PC he slapped into the vintage wooden case are unknown. The title of the video says it is a gaming PC build, but when he tests the temperatures at the end of the video, he compares it to a laptop.

The motherboard itself looks like a custom job. At least, it has had parts added to it, including various USB slots.

The good news is the big stainless steel USB fan he used does the job. The temperatures of his build are in line with what you’d expect from gaming on a laptop. He pulled it off with one single fan, although he had to reverse the blades to pull air into the case, and he installed a clear plastic fin to help guide the air across the motherboard.

This isn’t the first merging of vintage home deco with modern tech. Check out Jeffrey Stephenson’s slipperyskip.com site for some weird examples. But Hurd’s creation is in a class by itself.

Editors' Recommendations

Nathan Drescher
Nathan Drescher is a freelance journalist and writer from Ottawa, Canada. He's been writing about technology from around the…
What is DirectX, and why is it important for PC games?
DirectX 12 Ultimate logo.

DirectX is the secret sauce that allows most of the best PC games to run. It solves a problem for developers by offering a standardized solution to communicate instructions to your graphics card, and it's a cornerstone of the best graphics cards you can buy right now.

We'll run you through what DirectX is, why DirectX 12 Ultimate is important, and how you can find what DirectX version is installed on your PC.
What is DirectX?

Read more
The most demanding PC games we’re looking forward to in 2023
A gun shooting at robots in Atomic Heart.

2023 is shaping up to be an exciting year in video games, and no small part of that is the technical advancements the new year brings. Unreal Engine 5, complicated ray tracing, and features like DLSS 3 promise to push graphical quality to places they've never gone before -- assuming you have one of the best graphics cards to keep up.

There are a lot of games I'm excited to play this year, but even more that I'm excited to look at and test. If you want to push your gaming PC to its limits, here are the most demanding games you should look forward to over the next year.
Dead Space
10 Minutes of Dead Space Remake Gameplay

Read more
Alienware finally improved PC gaming controllers, but this one’s still not perfect
Scroll wheels on the Concept Nyx controller.

Dell is expanding its Concept Nyx efforts with a vital piece of kit: an Alienware-branded controller. A controller isn't something I'd normally write about; they're a dime a dozen. But this concept has some unique ideas, even if it still needs some work before it's ready for prime time.

First, let's discuss Concept Nyx. Alienware debuted this idea at last year's CES, and it's expanding on the idea this year. Nyx is a whole-house server, and the idea is that you can carry your gameplay to any screen you have. Move from the desktop onto the couch and pick up immediately -- and I do mean immediately -- where you left off. If someone else is playing a game or using the server for anything else, you can even split the screen and enjoy Cyberpunk 2077 while someone else is ranking up in Overwatch 2 or chatting on a video call.

Read more