·feist· said:If any of the Cooler Master CM690 II owners here are like me and need to get more air into their cases, these photos below may give you some ideas (these are not mine):
http://i36.tinypic.com/2vjab8j.jpg
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http://i910.photobucket.com/albums/ac306/twicey/P8150207.jpg http://i910.photobucket.com/albums/ac306/twicey/P8150206.jpg
Dual 120mm fans. I've been considering doing this for some time now as the front 140mm intake isn't enough to cover all six HDDs in the primary drive cage. Either that, or I may work in a 180/200mm single intake.
abq said:I sent my mobo and HDD back to the vendor at the beginning of this week and recieved everything today. They said the HDD problem I had was due to some incompatibility issue between the mobo and HDD, so they sent me a different model.
Trying to install Windows 7 from a usb stick atm.
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Kintaro said:I'm on the verge of ordering this case and fans. I love the style.
kagete said:AVAdirect isn't truly customizable as they don't allow you to select Nvidia cards if the board is a Crossfire board (or vice-versa) in certain config pages. From trying a few builds on their site I'd really just recommend going with the i5-750 and a GTX 470 with 64-bit Windows 7 included, maybe a nice CoolerMaster 690 II or similar case, a 212 cpu cooler, and Samsung F3 1TB. *IF I WAS BUYING FROM AVADIRECT, AND ONLY AVADIRECT, AND HAD ~$1200 to spend*
Another option is NCIXUS.com where you can pay $50 (i think) to have then assemble everything for you. Please don't look only at my advice and search around and see if people with similar builds to the one you're targetting have good results with them and try to see how much it cost them as well.
Yes.Midas said:Is it the Fractal Design? I have it right next to me, waiting for parts to be placed in it. But I don't have the graphics card just yet.![]()
The Dell is a very good choice. The only thing I have against Dell really is that their motherboard BIOS options are usually fairly gimped. I'm not sure if they'll even let you overclock it, but you should definitely ask some of the people here that got it if they can.apocalidiot said:I think actually I'm going to go with the Dell XPS 7100 that you recommended in the beginning. The specs are sweet and the price isn't bad from what the review covers. Looking at the specs from the review and the website, the build that says "Includes 6-core processor for maximum control over overclocking, media player video conversion, and game play" - http://www.dell.com/us/en/home/desktops/studio-xps-7100/pd.aspx?refid=studio-xps-7100&cs=19&s=dhs
Toki767 said:The Dell is a very good choice. The only thing I have against Dell really is that their motherboard BIOS options are usually fairly gimped. I'm not sure if they'll even let you overclock it, but you should definitely ask some of the people here that got it if they can.
I'm not in North America. Doesn't Fractal have distributors overseas? I'll take some pics later. It's hard to capture the beauty of the R2, the understated aesthetics, on camera, though.·feist· said:More pics of the build, please (especially that case). Also, if you happen to be in North America, how much was shipping for the R2/R3?
Quoting this for the new page:
anonymousAversa said:I've had a problem similar to this trying to install windows XP and it was driving me crazy.. Turns out the problem was one little setting in the BIOS under SATA Compatibility mode or something.
Definitely check all the hard drive settings in your BIOS. You can access this normally by pressing F1 when your computer first starts up. Google "BIOS Setup sata compatibility" etc.
Mr Nightman said:Im looking for a micro atx mid tower case that has a lot of room internally(for a 9 inch 9800gt) and has great airflow, preferably under $100, any suggestions?
I think it's great but if you could show me an example of something to swap it with i'll look into it, we needed a monitor replacement today so it's why I went and bought it directly instead of looking at online stores, plus as I said before we have nothing hdmi in the house and if we did it would go in the main room on the 32"Tensai said:For that price you could have got something a lotttttttttttttt better. I'd return it and get something else.
Looks like a white mini p180DrForester said:That the Antec 183? I got the 193 for the giant, filtered, side intake but unfortunately it made ti do I could not use that Corsair CPU cooler. Zalman fan I have is doing just fine though.
undu said:Looks like a white mini p180
Edit: he even says so in the post.![]()
Omiee said:what is faster a sinlge 5970 or 2 460's or 2 470's
anybody have a chart..?
brain_stew said:I wouldn't recommend a 5970, it can often have weird scaling issues and is overpriced. 470s are the fastest.
Comparison here, its pretty much the same as SLI 460s really but with slower Crossfire profile updates and a much higher price:
http://www.anandtech.com/bench/Product/165?vs=181
Since the prices are close just go with what you feel the most comftable with, if you worry about having two cards then go with the single beefy oneOmiee said:the 460 sli will cost me 440 euro.
470 cross fire about 500
a 5970 430 euro.
so its not that much more expensive.
and people keep saying crossfire and sli is not good so i thought better to go with a single card and the fastest and i found that that is the 5970. right..?
my first thought was to settle with a 480 now and get a second one after a year or so when they get cheaper. but all this talk about sli and crossfire being not good i thought better to go with the 5970.
Omiee said:the 460 sli will cost me 440 euro.
470 cross fire about 500
a 5970 430 euro.
so its not that much more expensive.
and people keep saying crossfire and sli is not good so i thought better to go with a single card and the fastest and i found that that is the 5970. right..?
my first thought was to settle with a 480 now and get a second one after a year or so when they get cheaper. but all this talk about sli and crossfire being not good i thought better to go with the 5970.
brain_stew said:The 5970 isn't a single card, its crossfire on a single PCB and has all the same issues as other multi GPU setups do (moreso since crossfire is worse than SLI).
How much is the 480?
Omiee said:a 480 has seen a price cut today from 430 euro to 350 euro..
and thats not my only issuebrain_stew said:Then get that, its the obvious choice.
Aselith said:My friend wants me to build him the best computer money can buy. He's well off so price is basically no object. What is the best CPU + GPU + Motherboard combo at the moment? I don't want to fuck the guy by going too high on something that will have severly dimished returns. Is the I7 the best CPU at a reasonable price on the market right now or should I go higher?
brain_stew said:If he wants the best.
A Core i7 970 is what he wants, 6 cores + hyperthreading.
SLI GTX 480 AMP editions.
Intel SSD
AkIRA_22 said:Holy fucking shit I wish I was you right now.
here is my thoughts.
i7980X... hands down. chuck on a corsair H50 liquid and OC that to 4GHz+
GA-X58-UD9, huge expansion, if it's too expensive the UD7 will do.
two GTX480 in SLI (possibly 3)
12GB (3x4GB) Corsair Dominator or equivalent, gives room for future upgrade.
at least 1000W PSU I'd go with a Corsair modular 80+ bronze or silver.
a 128GB SSD either the Corsair Force 128 or the equivalent OCZ (sandforce controller)
you do not need to go nuts on the HDD a couple 2TB will do. RAID if you want.
case wise I would go for the Cooler Master HAF-X. great for SLi rigs chuck in an extra 200mm fan in the roof that will allow you to spin them a little slower, reducing noise.
30" dell or Mac display.
you can splash on a liquid cooling setup on the CPU and GPU, but it's more trouble than it's worth. you don't need to OC the GPU when you have two or three.
brain_stew said:If he wants the best.
A Core i7 970 is what he wants, 6 cores + hyperthreading.
SLI GTX 480 AMP editions.
Intel SSD
AkIRA_22 said:Holy fucking shit I wish I was you right now.
here is my thoughts.
i7980X... hands down. chuck on a corsair H50 liquid and OC that to 4GHz+
GA-X58-UD9, huge expansion, if it's too expensive the UD7 will do.
two GTX480 in SLI (possibly 3)
12GB (3x4GB) Corsair Dominator or equivalent, gives room for future upgrade.
at least 1000W PSU I'd go with a Corsair modular 80+ bronze or silver.
a 128GB SSD either the Corsair Force 128 or the equivalent OCZ (sandforce controller)
you do not need to go nuts on the HDD a couple 2TB will do. RAID if you want.
case wise I would go for the Cooler Master HAF-X. great for SLi rigs chuck in an extra 200mm fan in the roof that will allow you to spin them a little slower, reducing noise.
30" dell or Mac display.
you can splash on a liquid cooling setup on the CPU and GPU, but it's more trouble than it's worth. you don't need to OC the GPU when you have two or three.
Aselith said:I'm poor and frankly I feel sick about going to someone with a $900 processor. I know you have to pay if you want the best but I feel like that AMD is nearly as good at a much more reasonable price point. Do you know how much of a performance gain the I7 gives you generally speaking?
Aselith said:How hard is a liquid set up to do? I've never handled one before so I'd be real worried about this exploding on his motherboard in the future. Is it pretty easily done or do you need to know what you're doing? I'm good with computers so I can handle myself in a case I just really don't want to fuck someone over on accident because I'm not familiar with the tech.
Aselith said:I'm poor and frankly I feel sick about going to someone with a $900 processor. I know you have to pay if you want the best but I feel like that AMD is nearly as good at a much more reasonable price point. Do you know how much of a performance gain the I7 gives you generally speaking?
How hard is a liquid set up to do? I've never handled one before so I'd be real worried about this exploding on his motherboard in the future. Is it pretty easily done or do you need to know what you're doing? I'm good with computers so I can handle myself in a case I just really don't want to fuck someone over on accident because I'm not familiar with the tech.
brain_stew said:If you get something like the Corsair H70, its no harder than an air cooler really.
TheExodu5 said:I'm drooling right now. Seriously.
Keep in mind you said "best money can buy". If you want a budget cap, let us know what the budget cap is.
Don't bother with it. Does require some maintenance, and upgrading is a bitch with liquid cooling.
TheExodu5 said:Still not worth it. The only reason you go liquid is if you're really pushing the overclocks, and you will want to know what you're doing with a setup like that (volt modding, etc.).
Air is more than good enough to cool anything bar an extreme overclock.
BigBlackGamer said:if your card has dual DVI then switch to the other DVI port.
Aselith said:Yeah, I totally understand that. I think it's more my own hangup rather than his. There is no way in fucking hell I'd ever drop that much on a CPU. Anyway, I left him a voicemail about it so we'll see what he thinks.
brain_stew said:Well something like that isn't really all that more expensive than a high end air cooler. If he's got the cash, might as well have nice low temperatures and something that looks cool.
Aselith said:Yeah, I totally understand that. I think it's more my own hangup rather than his. There is no way in fucking hell I'd ever drop that much on a CPU. Anyway, I left him a voicemail about it so we'll see what he thinks.
TheExodu5 said:If you want my honest opinion:
Super high end:
AMD 6 core or i7 930 -> Overclock to 4.0GHz
Deluxe motherboard
12GB RAM
SLI GTX 480
SSD
2x 2TB HDDs
30" Dell display
High end:
cut the ram down to 6GB
cut the video card down to a single GTX 480
32" 1080p TV with low input lag (possibly the newer LGs)
The heat plates for video cards are like $100.
TheExodu5 said:brain_stew pretty much said it. What we need to know though: were you absolutely serious about money not being an object, or were you just exaggerating? If money is a concern he could spend half as much on the computer and get something nearly as good, and buy another computer a few years down the road.
Let's be honest, the i7 980 is not going to offer significant performance advantages in most games. You're far more likely to be GPU bound.
If we're talking purely gaming performance, I'd just go i7 930 with a mad overclock, 2x GTX 480 with custom coolers to keep them nice and quiet, and a good looking case (the HAF-X previously mentioned is pretty sweet).
brain_stew said:The Corsair is for the CPU only and its radiator stays inside your case though. Its not really comparable to a traditional water cooling setup.
brain_stew said:Don't think you'll get anything much better/quieter than the cooler that comes standard with Zotac's AMP edition GTX 480s.
TheExodu5 said:I just checked a review...seems to get beaten pretty badly by the Noctua DH-14.
Isn't Arctic bringing out an Accelero for the GTX 480 now?
edit: oh shit, the Zotac is using the Zalman VF3000. I thought I only saw 2 heat pipes on there...but it must be damned decent to pull that name from Zalman.