Hard to do successfully...I know. This setup solves the problem perfectly for me. Many cases are made this way, with a 3.5" hard drive cage that goes to the bottom of the case. With a setup like this you can de-couple at least three drives from the case with a minor amount of hassle, and not use up a 5.5" bay.
The pictures tell the story. One 4x10" copper plate cut in two pieces, holes drilled in four corners for rubber bushings, mount holes drilled for the hard drives, one section cut out of the original hard drive cage, mount holes drilled to mount the new cage. With this setup the entire copper cage and drives are rubber mounted. The drives can then be removed separately as you would with the stock setup, leaving the new copper cage attached to the case.
It works. I used this new setup with some older noisy maxtor drives, which made loud seek noises in the stock setup. Quiet as a pin now. As a benefit you get two large copper heatsinks....
De-coupled Hard Drives
The pictures tell the story. One 4x10" copper plate cut in two pieces, holes drilled in four corners for rubber bushings, mount holes drilled for the hard drives, one section cut out of the original hard drive cage, mount holes drilled to mount the new cage. With this setup the entire copper cage and drives are rubber mounted. The drives can then be removed separately as you would with the stock setup, leaving the new copper cage attached to the case.
It works. I used this new setup with some older noisy maxtor drives, which made loud seek noises in the stock setup. Quiet as a pin now. As a benefit you get two large copper heatsinks....
De-coupled Hard Drives