I got a Evga GeForce GTX 780, and I have connected the HDMI to the HDTV, and DVI-I to my monitor. I'm getting a second monitor real soon as well, do I just buy a DVI-D cable and connect it to the second monitor then?
I got a Evga GeForce GTX 780, and I have connected the HDMI to the HDTV, and DVI-I to my monitor. I'm getting a second monitor real soon as well, do I just buy a DVI-D cable and connect it to the second monitor then?
Are there any announcements regarding video cards that will/should happen (and have them be available) around July of this year that people are waiting on?
I need to beef up my GPU for the Oculus DK2 and so far the 780 Ti 6 Gb (assuming it's out this month) looks to be the main conetnder. I've seen some waiting for _________ but I will need them in July. Of course I'll most likely wait ... but it would be good to know in case I see a sale (may even go for the 3Gb 780 Ti if the price is right).
Hi all, hope you can help me with some of my PSU woes. Basically, my computer won't power on, unless I move the mains power cord around in the back of the PSU until it clicks on. By doing this I can get it to turn on, and once it does it seems fine, but this isn't exactly ideal. I'm guessing its the actual connectors in the socket that have gone, because I've tried it with different leads to no change. Any suggestions?
It's not something I'd recommend jumping into until you've done some considerable reading on the subject. I didn't know a thing until I began researching last year. My first water build went fine. Nothing blew up, despite some spills and I'm very pleased with the results.
I went to forums like overclockers, they have dedicated forums with good sticky threads for the basics.
Watch lots of youtube videos. Then watch some more. I selected my case then searched for a water build videos for that particular case. You should get an idea of what components you can fit in and from there get some ideas on what radiators you might want. It also helps to see how the tubing could be run.
Linus has some good videos and I found Dazmode's complete water cooling guide very useful. It's a few years old now, but most of the info was still relevant.
No-one announces GPUs to buy that early in advance. When nvidia or AMD announce a product, it will be a few weeks away from sale at most. There's Computex on June 3rd, which could be a place to announce a GPU, but no-one can tell you for sure what's going to happen.
We've seen a pretty believable leak about the GTX 880 this week, but if the leak is accurate, all that means is the card is probably coming in 2014.
I recommend:
HDMI - HDTV
DVI-D - Secondary monitor
Displayport - Main monitor
Oh, what is the difference between those?
I'm gonna buy a Displayport cable and use for my primary monitor, and then use the DVI-D (don't remember if it's I or D) one for my secondary.
Edit:
It's a converter to DVI-D I'm using now.
Which PSU is it? Model number please.
Have you tried replacing the power lead from the PSU to the wall?
Hey guys, is the gtx 780 ti overkill for 1080p single screen gaming? I need it to last for 3ish years. I also kinda feel like 3gb of vram is not enough? In a few years, it seems like its going to end up being like the 1.5gb vram cards that we had out not too long ago.
Do you need to go Nvidia? You can get a 3GB 280X for £230 and you'd have more money in your pocket for another upgrade, sooner.
£320 for this 780 http://www.ebuyer.com/620192-kfa2-g...playport-pci-e-graphics-card-78xnh5dn8mst-oem
Better buy than the 4GB 770. You'll lose a bit of VRAM yes but it has a lot more grunt which is far more important.
If you have Quidco or TopCashBack too you can get around 2% back on it.
You can get an R9 290 for £290 now fulfilled by Amazon and an R9 280X for around £210 but by the looks of it you want to stick with Nvidia.
I've been wondering the same thing as well. I'm only going up to 1080P on my T.V. and I wanted to get a 780 ti but I don't know if it's necessary or not. I'm emulating older games
Corsair AX750, I have but only with the power lead from my monitor, which has the same three pin connector. It was the only similar cable I had to hand, but it made no difference.
So if I do this:
HDMI - 46" HDTV
Displayport - Monitor 1
DVI-D - Monitor 2
But how can I connect to a 32" HDTV as well, will I need an extra video card then?
The card has 4 outputs. If one of the TVs has a DVI input, use the DVI-I port you have free. If not, buy a DVI to HDMI adapter or cable for a few quid.
Oh, I didn't know there were such adapters. Thank you, I'll write this down.
Btw, should my temperatures lie around 35c at Core #0-3?
The card has 4 outputs. If one of the TVs has a DVI input, use the DVI-I port you have free. If not, buy a DVI to HDMI adapter or cable for a few quid.
Oh, I didn't know there were such adapters. Thank you, I'll write this down.
Btw, should my temperatures lie around 35c at Core #0-3?
The temperature is while I'm on the desktop and having the internet open.I assume this is air cooling with the PC idle. Temperatures seem OK, but without telling us the ambient temperature in the room it's kind of pointless to comment.
Be careful with this. Most consumer cards will only support three of their outputs running at the same time. So while there are four ports, not all can always be active. Mad has a 780 if I'm remembering correctly?
The temperature is while I'm on the desktop and having the internet open.
I'm just not sure if my CPU get enough air from my Evo 212.
Cheers!
I thought the newer AMD cards were still being artificially inflated by miners so I didn't even bother looking to be honest. Still a consideration then even though I have the 3D vision kit since that will be obsolete by the time I get VR anyway. I may end up with the AMD yet now noise isn't an issue (Steam streaming, baby).
My parts come in today, excited for this weekend! Any recommendations on what to play first? Going to be playing on my TV with a controller. Want something that is going to show off.
That's exciting!!! I'm planning in doing the same
Nice!Can't wait to get started.
I have a network connection issue that seems to be heat-related, as it only comes up when I run certain games that make my GPU go nuts.
I use something similar to this:
In order to keep it away from heat, as well as to position it for optimal signal, and because it's such a stupid shape to fit near other usb ports, I'm using a USB extension cable to connect it to the PC, so it's well away from the case.
Whenever a game causes my GPU fans to spin up very high, I can expect to see the little warning triangle or the red X on the wifi system tray icon, indicating limited or no connectivity. Thing is, if I immediately click a link in my browser or refresh a page, it will usually work immediately, and the signal icon will return to normal. Sometimes I have to go in to the adapter settings and disable and re-enable the device, and then it works.
It is definitely dropping the connection though, even if it seems to recover instantly when prompted - I've been fullscreen gaming while signed in to Skype, and people have told me afterwards that I've been offline a while, and when I was playing Dark Souls recently the GFWL thing popped up and said I'd been signed out... etc.
That got me thinking... if the adapter is so far away from a heat source, perhaps it's the USB port itself in the back my PC that's getting too hot? After all, it is fairly near the GPU. So I've been playing around, trying all available ports and it's doesn't make any difference (and anyway, how could it - the adapter itself is still showing as a USB device, and all my other USB devices plugged into the same sockets aren't failing under the same conditions).
What could it be? If anyone can shed some light I'd be very grateful!
Thanks for the reply! I have no USB3 ports on my PC. I've tried it on almost every port and I get the same results, even using the ones that pass through my monitor. With the extension cable and the monitor cables, the adapter is surely far enough away from interference, but it still happens (although ultimately it's still going into the same USB connection on the motherboard so I guess... the interference could be.. on that end? I guess you meant interference with the wi-fi signal going to the antenna though...)I see the dongle is USB2, but is it connected to a USB3 port? USB3 is known to cause 2.4 GHz interference. Google it. Try a front USB2 port if you've got one.
Whatever it is, I don't think it's heat. It's either interference or a power issue.
Get an IntelNUCHey guys, How's this PC look to you all? I'm in the market for a new one. I know ordering pieces and making your own is generally cheaper, but frankly i don't feel like doing it.
Yep.BTW, I would like to OC this i5 4670K. Is the best time to do so after fresh Windows/drivers install? I've never OC'd before.
Yep.
BTW, I would like to OC this i5 4670K. Is the best time to do so after fresh Windows/drivers install? I've never OC'd before.
Wow, that thing looks tiny. Almost doesn't look practical, not that I claim to have excessive knowledge on computers. The 2TB drive is just about bare minimum for me given my rather large music collection. I actually prefer to have the expansion bays like on the one I posted for addition drives. Thanks for the suggestion, though
Why not use USB 3.0 externals?Wow, that thing looks tiny. Almost doesn't look practical, not that I claim to have excessive knowledge on computers. The 2TB drive is just about bare minimum for me given my rather large music collection. I actually prefer to have the expansion bays like on the one I posted for addition drives. Thanks for the suggestion, though
Why not use USB 3.0 externals?
Thanks for the reply! I have no USB3 ports on my PC. I've tried it on almost every port and I get the same results, even using the ones that pass through my monitor. With the extension cable and the monitor cables, the adapter is surely far enough away from interference, but it still happens (although ultimately it's still going into the same USB connection on the motherboard so I guess... the interference could be.. on that end? I guess you meant interference with the wi-fi signal going to the antenna though...)
As for power, no doubt the system is drawing the most power during these games that run hot. But all the other USB devices aren't failing during this time... for instance, I have a USB soundcard that has no separate power supply, so that would surely be a clear indication of power loss through USB, but I've never had sound issues.
Depending on what you are looking for, you'll probably have to wait for a long time to get anything better than what you can get now.What's the current outlook for future CPU/GPU stuff? Trying to debate whether I want to upgrade sooner rather than later.