industrian
will gently cradle you as time slowly ticks away.
Did Nvidia have their GDC conference yet? Any mention of Maxwell, GTX 800 series?
Wait for Computex.
Did Nvidia have their GDC conference yet? Any mention of Maxwell, GTX 800 series?
I knew this going in, water cooling requires maintenance. Should flush the loop every 6 months and full clean every year. I've gone all the way this time because the algae got EVERYWHERE. Unfortunately that means the di noc came off my GPUs and I don't think I will put it back on. You couldn't see them anyway sandwiched together in SLI and face down.
You should check out the SFF guide in this thread, third post.
I'd suggest swapping the P280 for a Define R4, and the Noctua heatsink for one of the CoolerMaster 212 units. Would work out to the same price, and end up being more quiet with a much better case.
Also, swap the PSU for a 650W version of the same one, save a little extra. I'd suggest the Seasonic G series, but I assume you went with the RM for how quiet it is?
*edit*
Also, with only the 660 Ti and a consumer socket CPU putting heat into the case, you definitely do not need any additional case fans. The fans on the Define R4 are basically silent. They're not nearly as efficient as some of the nicer case fans out there, but you don't really need them to be with the tiny amount of watts needing to be moved out.
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant / Benchmarks
CPU: Intel Core i7-4770K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor ($309.99 @ Newegg)
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D14 65.0 CFM CPU Cooler ($78.50 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: Asus Z87-Pro ATX LGA1150 Motherboard ($184.00 @ Newegg)
Memory: Corsair Vengeance Pro 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory ($169.99 @ Newegg)
Storage: Samsung 840 Pro Series 128GB 2.5" Solid State Disk (Purchased For $0.00)
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Green 3TB 3.5" 5400RPM Internal Hard Drive ($108.00 @ Newegg)
Video Card: Gigabyte GeForce GTX 660 Ti 2GB Video Card (Purchased For $0.00)
Case: Fractal Design Define R4 (Black Pearl) ATX Mid Tower Case ($111.88 @ Amazon)
Power Supply: Corsair RM 750W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply ($114.98 @ Amazon)
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 8.1 (OEM) (64-bit) (Purchased For $0.00)
Total: $1077.34
(Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.)
(Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-03-22 06:13 EDT-0400)
Thanks for the advice and I am making a few changes after considering your suggestions.
- Swapping Antec P280 for Fractal Define R4 (Black Pearl, windowless) - I've looked into the R4 several times, and the smaller size and white accents turned me off repeatedly. However, I do like the better fit of components inside and the 140mm fan slots are very attractive in terms of effective cooling vs noise.
- Swapping Noctua NH-U14S for Noctua NH-D14 - It should work fine with the memory modules I've picked and it may be massive, but all my research suggests it's the best heatsink/fan cooler you can buy.
- Keeping Corsair RM750 - The price difference between the 750W and 650W is negligible, regardless of whether or not I need 750W. I do prefer the RM series for silence and, if I recall correctly, Seasonic is the OEM for Corsair's power supplies.
- If I go with the R4, I intend to replace the fans and PCI slot covers with black alternatives. I absolutely do not like the white accents inside of an otherwise all black case; I suppose I'll just have to accept the white HDD cages.
The RM750 isn't made by Seasonic but by Chicony. It's a decent PSU, but it uses cheap capacitors (Ltec) so I'd recommend the G-series over it.
So anyone planning on doing a build when DDR4 and the 8 core Intel launches? I started saving for it three months ago. I still want to wait till the Nvidia makes good on the ~1TB/s bandwidth 3D GDDR memory <3
I had this problem with my first loop about 10 years ago. It turned out that the anti-algae additive I put in didn't actually do shit, and when I found out it got so bet that I ended up throwing everything away. So when I built my current loop I decided to look into different additives a bit more, and after some internet detective work I found that the only reliable options (that are commonly sold) are: Mayhem's biocide, Pt Nuke and a silver coil.
In the end I went with a silver coil and the water is still as clear as it was when I last flushed it 4 months ago.
Meh, I doubt anyone would be interested in that thing. It's not like the original post of this thread recommends it or anything.Does anyone have any opinion on the Ezio Foris Fg2421?
Soo umm today the ON/OFF flipswitch of my PSU broke o.o I can't flip it to OFF anymore as it automatically jumps back to ON. Is this any cause for concern for the rest of the PSU's functionality? It's a old BeQuiet! Straight Power Dual Rail 550w PSU from 2007 and it works fine still as I can see but I thought it would be better to ask before just in case.
It powers the following:
3 Intermal HDDs
1 DVD Drive
2 additional fans
3 non-self powered USB devices (iPhone, Vita, DualShock 3/4)
2 RAM modules @ 2133mhz
i3570k @ 3.7ghz
Club3D 7970 Royal Queen at 1100mhz core clock with stock voltage
SoundBlaster X-Fi XtremeGamer
If I should get a new one which would be good without being too expensive? I don't plan to go much over these specs and SLI/Crossfire I will also never do. Thanks in advance!
No i wouldnt change your PSU. Worst case the PSU is always ON, its not like its always OFF, or randomly switches OFF.
Yeah I had silver coil before and worked great but I have nickel and copper in the same loop and it eroded the nickel like no tomorrow.
I thought you weren't supposed to mix metals? I mean you can...but it's not suggested?
You're not but you can. Copper and silver have low reactivity and copper and nickel have low reactivity however nickel and silver have high reactivity which causes galvanization (rust) in the nickel. So you can do nickel and copper with biocide or full copper with silver coil. I purchased my parts before understanding all this. Nobody makes a nickel plated radiator so pretty much full copper is the way to go. Or gold plate everything =P
Gotcha.
I'm using your experience and that algae pic that makes me itch as a learning experience
Based on mkenyon said and my experience, full copper + mayhems biocide. Great thing about copper is you can just soak it in vinegar and that will make it shiny, clean and new again.
I'm looking at picking up an EVGA GTX 780.
There seems to be a Superclocked version and a normal, stock one.
The Superclocked version is 20$ more. Can I just manually overclock the factory card to the same levels as the Superclocked version, without having to dish out the extra bill?
Thanks.
I'm looking at picking up an EVGA GTX 780.
There seems to be a Superclocked version and a normal, stock one.
The Superclocked version is 20$ more. Can I just manually overclock the factory card to the same levels as the Superclocked version, without having to dish out the extra bill?
Thanks.
I thought you weren't supposed to mix metals? I mean you can...but it's not suggested?
GAF, I need some help. The first time I turned on my new PC it was fine, but aside from the 1st startup I have to go to the motherboard's HDMI port to get and video output. I'm using a R9 280x. It's fans are spinning, so I know it's getting power, but I can't figure out how to get video output from it. I opened up the case and made sure it's all the way in the PCI-E slot as well.
So I finally built my first PC, and it is super beefy for now at least. The problem is, now that I have the PC, there aren't any games I want to play that take advantage of it! What would you all recommend I play to get a feel for how powerful my machine really is? My build looks like:
CPU: Intel Core i7-4770K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D14 65.0 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: Asus Maximus VI Hero ATX LGA1150 Motherboard
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory
Storage: Samsung 840 EVO 250GB 2.5" Solid State Disk
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Ti 3GB Video Card
Case: Corsair 750D ATX Full Tower Case
Power Supply: Corsair Professional 750W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply
For that price you could look at this combo:Does anyone have any mobo and CPU recommendations for under £200. I want something from a UK retailer that beats an 8350 and motherboard for £180.
So I finally built my first PC, and it is super beefy for now at least. The problem is, now that I have the PC, there aren't any games I want to play that take advantage of it! What would you all recommend I play to get a feel for how powerful my machine really is? My build looks like:
CPU: Intel Core i7-4770K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D14 65.0 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: Asus Maximus VI Hero ATX LGA1150 Motherboard
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory
Storage: Samsung 840 EVO 250GB 2.5" Solid State Disk
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Ti 3GB Video Card
Case: Corsair 750D ATX Full Tower Case
Power Supply: Corsair Professional 750W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply
Does anyone have any mobo and CPU recommendations for under £200. I want something from a UK retailer that beats an 8350 and motherboard for £180.
Agreed.
Or you could go used on the CPU front and pick up a 3570K for example and get a Z77 mobo for £100.
Just don't go AMD on the CPU front.[/QUOTE
I am still undecided, do you have any reviews that trash AMD's performance. Every benchmark I've seen suggests it pulls its weight at worst and outperforms a lot of intel at best. Hell if you are apparently playing the long game the many cores and ps4 dominance will make console ports run better.
Agreed.
Or you could go used on the CPU front and pick up a 3570K for example and get a Z77 mobo for £100.
Just don't go AMD on the CPU front.
I am still undecided, do you have any reviews that trash AMD's performance. Every benchmark I've seen suggests it pulls its weight at worst and outperforms a lot of intel at best. Hell if you are apparently playing the long game the many cores and ps4 dominance will make console ports run better.
I plan on building my first PC with the same parts. How much did this cost you?
I wussed out a little and bought everything on amazon so that I didn't have to deal with setting up accounts at a whole bunch of different stores. All told, it cost me about $2,300 after taxes (but including a new keyboard, monitor, and mouse and some miscellaneous parts I didn't list above). I'm sure you could shave $100-200 off that price by shopping around for parts, but I'm just not that thrifty.
It's also nice to have everything on one bill and delivered mostly around the same time. For my build I ordered from at least a dozen retailers because canada sucks.
Go into the BIOS and set it to PCI video out not IGP. What motherboard do you have? I can go look up the exact steps for you
How about closed loop? I've seen some pretty impressive results with the NZXT video card bracket. Or just zip ties.
Having a radiator for every CPU and GPU will probably restrict case options though.
I am still undecided, do you have any reviews that trash AMD's performance. Every benchmark I've seen suggests it pulls its weight at worst and outperforms a lot of intel at best. Hell if you are apparently playing the long game the many cores and ps4 dominance will make console ports run better.
The only thing you have to worry about then is your GPU, just buy a good aftermarket one and you're fine. People who spend 300 bucks on a 760 and then 150-200 to cool it are wasting their time. Just buy the max GPU you can with your budget and let it ride. Nothing else really needs to be cooled, a case can be made for memory but the gains you see from it are so small it doesn't matter.
Gesamtpreis: 782,67 €
- CPU: AMD A-Series A10-7850K Box mit AMD Radeon R7 Series Graphics (95W), FM2 + 159,00 €
- Heat Sink: Corsair Hydro Series H60 69,99 €
- RAM: 8GB-Kit Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600 MHz CL9 85,00 €
- Case: Silverstone SST-RVZ01 Raven Z schwarz, benötigt SFX-Netzteil 94,90 €
- Power supply: be quiet! SFX POWER 2 400W 59,90 €
- Graphic card (as I would like to use the dual graphic feature) AMD Radeon R7 250, 2GB DDR3 74,90 €
- HDD: Seagate Barracuda 7200 2000GB, SATA 6Gb/s 89,00 €
- SSD: Samsung SSD 840 EVO Basic 250GB SATA 6Gb/s 129,99 €
http://www.atelco.de/pckonfigurator/meinpc/243057
The CPU in the PS4 is another league entirely. It's a CPU made for tablets and netbooks.
As for AMD getting trounced, see what Smokey has posted plus
Read this too http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=512976
Hmm. But I am paying at mimumum a £50 premium for a comparable intel CPU. Is it worth it?
Not sure if this build is legit or not, anything I can improve on?
Budget is $800.
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/3epNR
Just get the i5-4440 (which is comparable to the i5-3470 in those charts) and a motherboard:Hmm. But I am paying at mimumum a £50 premium for a comparable intel CPU. Is it worth it?