Buying Guide

How to Choose a Rack Case

Choosing the right rack case depends on the rackmount equipment you need to protect, how deep the gear is, how many rack spaces are required, how often the system moves, and whether the case needs wheels, shock protection, console access, or a lightweight soft design.

Use this guide to compare standard, rolling, shallow, console, soft, and shockmount rack case options for AV systems, broadcast gear, live sound, mobile production, networking hardware, servers, and electronics transport.

  • Compare rack case styles by protection level, mobility, and access needs
  • Plan for rack units, rack depth, cable clearance, and loaded weight
  • Match the case type to broadcast, AV, IT, field, touring, or production workflows
Start with rack space, depth, and transport frequency. The right rack case should fit the rackmount gear, allow enough depth for cables and rear connections, and match how often the system will be moved, shipped, rolled, carried, or installed.
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What to Consider

Key Factors Before Choosing a Rack Case

Rack cases protect rackmount equipment while also supporting setup, access, cabling, mobility, and repeated use. Start by confirming the equipment requirements, then choose the case style that fits the workflow.

Rack Units

Count how many rack spaces your equipment requires. Include all rackmount components, blank panels, power distribution, drawers, shelves, patch panels, and any extra space needed for airflow or future expansion.

Rack Depth

Measure the depth of the deepest component and allow room for cables, connectors, rear rails, lids, ventilation, and access. Shallow equipment may not need a full-depth rack case.

Protection Level

Stationary or light transport setups may need a standard rack case, while fragile electronics or frequent shipping may require a shockmount rack case with additional isolation.

Mobility

If the loaded rack will be heavy or moved frequently, rolling rack cases can make transport easier through facilities, staging areas, studios, events, and production environments.

Access and Setup

Consider whether operators need front access, rear access, top mixer access, removable lids, cable routing, ventilation, or the ability to operate equipment while it remains in the case.

Loaded Weight

Rackmount systems can become heavy quickly. Estimate the combined weight of the case, equipment, hardware, drawers, cables, power units, and accessories before selecting a case style.

Case Types

Compare Common Rack Case Options

Different rack case types solve different equipment protection, mobility, access, and workflow needs.

Standard Rack Cases

Standard rack cases are a practical option for rackmount equipment that needs organized protection for transport, storage, setup, or light-to-moderate movement.

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Shockmount Rack Cases

Shockmount rack cases are designed for sensitive electronics, broadcast systems, servers, AV gear, and rackmount equipment that needs additional protection during shipping or frequent transport.

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Rolling Rack Cases

Rolling rack cases are useful when loaded racks are heavy, moved often, or transported through venues, schools, facilities, warehouses, studios, or production spaces.

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Shallow Rack Cases

Shallow rack cases are useful for compact rackmount equipment, networking gear, shallow electronics, wireless systems, patch gear, and setups that do not need a full-depth case.

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Console Rack Cases

Console rack cases are often used for mixers, control surfaces, production equipment, and setups where top access or angled access is needed during operation.

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Soft Rack Cases

Soft rack cases may be useful for lighter equipment, local transport, mobile setups, and applications where lower weight is more important than heavy-duty impact protection.

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Sizing Guide

How to Size a Rack Case

Rack case sizing is based on rack spaces, usable depth, equipment layout, cable clearance, and loaded weight.

Count Rack Spaces

Confirm the rack unit requirement for each component. Add space for power distribution, drawers, shelves, patch panels, blank panels, cooling space, and possible future expansion.

Measure Equipment Depth

Measure the deepest component from front to back. Include any connectors, plugs, rear rails, or mounted parts that increase the required depth.

Allow Cable Clearance

Leave room for rear connections, cable bends, power cords, signal cables, patching, airflow, and service access so equipment is not pressed tightly against the lid or rear wall.

Estimate Loaded Weight

Consider the total loaded weight of all rack gear, accessories, drawers, shelves, cables, and the case itself. This helps determine whether wheels or stronger handling features are needed.

Rack case sizing tip: Do not choose only by rack units. A case can have enough rack spaces but still be too shallow for the deepest component, rear connectors, cable bends, or airflow requirements.

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Match the Rack Case to the Application

The best rack case depends on where the equipment will be used and how often it will move.

Broadcast and Production

Broadcast and production workflows may require rack cases for switchers, monitors, audio gear, streaming systems, power units, encoders, receivers, and mobile production equipment.

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AV and Live Sound

AV and live sound teams often need rack cases for amplifiers, mixers, processors, wireless systems, lighting controllers, playback devices, and touring support equipment.

IT and Networking

IT teams may use rack cases for servers, switches, routers, firewalls, patch panels, power distribution, training systems, and deployable network kits.

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Field and Mobile Systems

Mobile teams may need rugged rack cases for diagnostic systems, communications gear, field electronics, emergency response equipment, or portable operations kits.

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Protection Level

Standard Rack Case vs. Shockmount Rack Case

The main difference is the level of protection required for the equipment and transport environment.

Choose a Standard Rack Case When...

The rack will be moved occasionally, used in controlled environments, transported locally, or used for equipment that does not require additional shock isolation.

  • Light-to-moderate transport
  • General AV, electronics, or rack organization
  • Lower weight and simpler handling needs
  • Budget-conscious rack protection

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Choose a Shockmount Rack Case When...

The equipment is sensitive, valuable, shipped often, used in demanding environments, or exposed to repeated handling, road cases, loading docks, field work, or frequent transport.

  • Frequent shipping or rough handling
  • Sensitive electronics or mission-critical gear
  • Broadcast, military, field, or mobile systems
  • Higher protection requirements

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Checklist

Rack Case Buying Checklist

Gather these details before choosing a rack case or requesting a recommendation.

  • Number of rack units required for all installed equipment.
  • Depth of the deepest rackmount component.
  • Extra rear clearance needed for cables, connectors, patching, airflow, and service access.
  • Estimated loaded weight of the full rack system.
  • Whether the rack will be carried, rolled, shipped, stored, or operated inside the case.
  • Whether front and rear lids need to be removable.
  • Whether the application needs standard, rolling, shallow, console, soft, or shockmount protection.
  • Whether the system is used for AV, broadcast, IT, live sound, field service, touring, or mobile production.
  • Any accessories, drawers, shelves, power units, blank panels, or cable management parts that need to be included.

Related Resources

Use these resources to compare rack case categories, broadcast applications, and support options.

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Browse rack cases by style, depth, mobility, protection level, and equipment application.

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Broadcast Rack Solutions

Explore rackmount case solutions for broadcast, AV, streaming, live sound, touring, and mobile production systems.

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Request Help

Need help choosing rack units, rack depth, case style, shock protection, or rolling transport options?

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