A case that's intended to be low-noise is going to have variable-speed fans. If the fans are always running at high speed it could be an indication of inadequate airflow. This would not surprise me in a rack-mounted device, wherein larger, slower-moving fans might not be practical.
If possible, I'd situate the computer at the bottom of the rack so there's nothing producing heat below it, and leave a 1U gap above it. You can get rack filler panels that are vented. I suppose you could test this by measuring noise levels immediately after turning the computer on, and comparing that to a couple hours later. This could be accomplished by mounting your SPL meter on a mike stand so it's locked in a fixed position.
This is assuming the problem is really fan noise, rather than hard drives. The difference is that fans produce broadband semi-white noise that can be mitigated with acoustical absorption, whereas case rattles, resonances and hard drive spindles have to be treated mechanically rather than acoustically.
All of this could be moot, though. If the noise level as seen at your microphone is 30 dB or more below the ambient room noise, it's probably not affecting your recordings anyway. My computer is only 3 feet from my microphone and with 5 fans is by no means a "quiet" computer. But it's on the dead side of the mike and there is acoustical absorption between them. Even with the mike gain cranked, the fan noise picked up is down -60 dB or more, so I don't worry about it.