Skip to main content

Dune Pro Chassis clones Apple’s Mac Pro design without the hefty price tag

Dune Pro PC Chassis
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Love the look of Apple’s latest Mac Pro but don’t want to spend that much money (or deal with macOS)? Dune Case has the chassis for you. System builders can grab this Mac Pro look-alike, called the Dune Pro, on October 21 through Kickstarter.

The Dune Pro is a mid-tower chassis measuring 8.58 x 17.7 x 20.8 inches. It’s made of 3mm aluminum sandblasted with fine beads to create an anodized surface. The frame itself is stainless steel with handles and feet that extend outward.

The Dune Pro supports Mini ITX, ATX, mATX, EATX, and EEB motherboards. It provides 380mm of space for graphics card(s) after removing the hard drive enclosure; it has a 250mm clearance with the enclosure intact. The CPU fan clearance is 160mm, meaning it can handle a 32-core processor.

This chassis includes seven PCI slots, five SSD brackets, three hard drive enclosures supporting up to 11 drives, and a motherboard extender. The top panel features one USB-C port supporting 10Gbps data transfers (Type-E male), and a second USB-C port supporting 5Gbps (20-pin).

Dune Pro Chassis
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Based on the specifications, this chassis doesn’t ship with fans. Instead, system builders can install their two 80mm fans of choice in the back. The front supports three fans at 120mm or two fans at 140mm. It also handles a 120mm, 240mm, or 360mm all-in-one radiator with fans.

While the Mac Pro provides a handle to easily lift the shell up and access its components, the Dune Pro relies on the typical side panel access. However, like the Mac Pro design, the Dune Pro’s front panel sports a cheese grater design. The company provides a similar grated design with a sound-dampening accessory that’s aimed at helping with acoustics.

“This panel has been machined at the front with large holes for air intake,” the company says. “At the back of the front panel, we’ve drawn a different pattern. This pattern is an array of dices that intersects at the ‘Y’ formation. The dice pattern is raised from the surface, which allows for sound to be dampened. We call this the Dice Y cover.”

The Kickstarter campaign begins on October 21. Pricing tiers and shipping dates are currently unknown.

Apple introduced its redesigned Mac Pro in June starting at $6,000. It’s still not available to purchase, but you can expect processor support up to a 28-core Intel Xeon W chip, up to a massive 1.5TB of DDR4 ECC memory, and up to four discrete GPUs, including the Radeon Pro Vega II and the Radeon Pro Vega II Duo.

Editors' Recommendations

Kevin Parrish
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kevin started taking PCs apart in the 90s when Quake was on the way and his PC lacked the required components. Since then…
The MacBook Pro is a good enough gaming laptop for me
Halo running on a MacBook Pro.

I'm not a hardcore gamer. But like a lot of people, I like to dabble here and there. Looking at my limited Steam account, I find a handful of remotely current titles I've enjoyed lately, including Baldur's Gate 3 and Civilization VI.

When I fully converted to a MacBook Pro from Windows, I didn't expect to have even my limited gaming needs met. I figured it would just be something I'd lose in the transition. To my surprise, I've found myself quite enjoying the experience of gaming on my M3 Max MacBook Pro 16-inch. It won't be enough to satisfy gamers, but it was enough to get me excited for the future of gaming on the Mac.
Where the Metal meets the microchip

Read more
MacBooks could soon fall behind the iPad Pro in this important way
The iPad Pro (2022) sitting in the Magic Keyboard.

The dynamic balance between the Mac and the iPad may be about to shift again. Both the MacBook Air and iPad Pro will reportedly get updated this spring, boosting performance with the inclusion of the new M3 chip.

But a new report from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman indicates that a new "landscape Face ID camera" may be in the works for the iPad Pro, potentially taking away one of the main advantages that MacBooks have over iPads. With so much of work happening in video calls, the iPad Pro might become a far better laptop replacement in this new generation.
The dream experience

Read more
40 years ago today, Apple launched something as audacious as the Vision Pro
A classic Apple Macintosh shows a friendly hello on-screen.

Today marks 40 years since Apple released the very first Mac, upending the entire computer industry and sowing the seeds for four decades of success for the company. Dubbed the Macintosh 128K, the device was an unprecedented success for Apple, and it quickly became one of the most important Macs ever. It also has curious parallels to the company’s situation today.

It's easy to look back now with fondness at the impact the product made -- a familiar piece of tech history that still undergirds so much of our current technology. But at the time, it was the start of something new. A bold, risky, and unprecedented leap forward. It's hard not to make comparisons to the Vision Pro, which officially launches just next week. But will we look back in 40 years at the Vision Pro with the same kind of reverence? Perhaps, but only if Apple learns the right lesson from its own history.
A computing revolution
1984 Apple's Macintosh Commercial (HD)

Read more