Coldsnap said:No homo but my computer is straight flexin.
i :lol'd
Coldsnap said:No homo but my computer is straight flexin.
Cool. I'll mess around with it tomorrow.black_vegeta said:At first I couldn't get it to close properly, then I redid the cables with more zip ties and made sure the cables were laying as flat as possible to the back of the case. Do that and it will close as it should.
You want the Pro V3, first one. It has the fixed SATA ports. The second one should have been recalled. Don't know why it's still being sold.mandiller said:Okay, I'm almost done with figuring out my new computer build. I just have one thing left to figure out - the motherboard.
I'm leaning towards one of these two, but I really don't know the difference between them:
http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&id2=106&bid=2&sid=73790
http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&id2=106&bid=2&sid=71190
Here's what I want out of a motherboard:
- Be able to overclock an i5 2500k with ease
- Be able to fit a Coolmaster Hyper 212 Plus cpu cooler on it (very important!)
- have some support for USB3.0
- Work well with a Crucial C400 SSD (for my OS, I want it to be hassle free)
Any recommendations between the two? Or perhaps a completely different one in the umart motherboard section? : http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&bid=2&id2=106
V3 should be the B3 model with the fixed SATA 3gbps ports.mandiller said:Okay, I'm almost done with figuring out my new computer build. I just have one thing left to figure out - the motherboard.
I'm leaning towards one of these two, but I really don't know the difference between them:
http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&id2=106&bid=2&sid=73790
http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&id2=106&bid=2&sid=71190
Here's what I want out of a motherboard:
- Be able to overclock an i5 2500k with ease
- Be able to fit a Coolmaster Hyper 212 Plus cpu cooler on it (very important!)
- have some support for USB3.0
- Work well with a Crucial C400 SSD (for my OS, I want it to be hassle free)
Any recommendations between the two? Or perhaps a completely different one in the umart motherboard section? : http://www.umart.com.au/pro/products_listnew.phtml?id=10&bid=2&id2=106
Hazaro said:Should be blazing.
Post the PSU. Don't skimp on it to power an expensive new rig
	The PSU should be fine running one GTX570 card.mandiller said:The PSU is an Antec TP3 650 W. It's a few years old. Is that okay? Here's a spec sheet I found: specs
Also, will the motherboard fit the CPU cooler fine? I've never had any experience with aftermarket coolers. This is what the motherboard looks like:
WAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
WAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
mandiller said:Samsung 1TB Spinpoint F3 SATA II 7200RPM 32M x2
Cooler Master Hyper 212 Plus Universal Cooler
Intel Core i5 2500K Processor LGA1155 3.3GHz CPU
Corsair CMX4GX3M2A1600C9 4GB (2x XMS3 2GB) PC-12800
Asus P8P67 PRO V3 L1155 P67
Crucial RealSSD C400 128G SATAIII
GTX 570
Fractal Design R3 case
	Looks good. Lotta amps on that 12V. Cooler will be fine.mandiller said:The PSU is an Antec TP3 650 W. It's a few years old. Is that okay? Here's a spec sheet I found: specs
Also, will the motherboard fit the CPU cooler fine? I've never had any experience with aftermarket coolers. This is what the motherboard looks like:
![]()
You don't have 64GB of DDR3 2200MHz to directly install your OS and Skyrim into?WAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
	WAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
TheExodu5 said:Overkill for Skyrim. That CPU should be bought only for professional or enthusiast use. I'm not a fan of dual-gpu cards like the 6990 either...too loud and hot. I rather have two separate GPUs in Crossfire.
Any particular reason you're not going Sandy Bridge for mobo/CPU?Pai Pai Master said:Got a raise and a big fat bonus coming in at the end of the month, so I think I'll treat myself to a new system that I've wanted for quite some time. I'm willing to plop down some heavy cash, but I'd appreciate it if you guys can answer some questions and help me trim down some fat if I'm shooting too high.
This machine needs to be capable of heavy gaming and some 3D modeling in Maya/Zbrush. I currently have an Intel Quadcore 2.8ghz machine coupled with a GTX260 that is still kicking some ass, but I want to be prepared for Skyrim/Battlefield 3 and I want to be able to better take advantage of 3D Vision without sacrificing so much in the framerate department. Personally, I don't need games to run at high/ultra settings, but if it can pull off some high-quality magic I'm cool with that. I'm more of a buttery smooth 80+ fps kind of guy.
EVGA X58 FTW3 132-GT-E768-TR LGA 1366 Intel X58 SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard $249.99
EVGA 012-P3-1571-KR GeForce GTX 570 HD w/Display-Port (Fermi) 1280MB 320-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 2.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Support ... $324.99
CORSAIR Gaming Series GS800 800W ATX12V v2.3 SLI Ready CrossFire Ready 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC High Performance Power ... $129.99
Intel Core i7-960 Bloomfield 3.2GHz LGA 1366 130W Quad-Core Desktop Processor BX80601960 $284.99
CORSAIR XMS 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMX8GX3M2A1600C9 $74.99
SAMSUNG Spinpoint F3 HD103SJ 1TB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive -Bare Drive $54.99
ZALMAN CNPS9900MAX-R 135mm Long life bearing CPU Cooler Red LED $79.99
COOLER MASTER HAF 932 Advanced RC-932-KKN5-GP Black Steel ATX Full Tower Compucase Case with USB 3.0 and Black Interior $139.98
Subtotal prior to rebates is $1,339.91.
I'm willing to budge on the CPU if you guys think the i7 is overkill for what I want...my problem is I don't want to have to replace the motherboard to upgrade later if I start with an i5. Is it that large of a gap between the i5 and i7, or will I benefit fine from the lower tier?
I can definitely save some bucks shopping around a bit more for things like case, cpu cooler and power supply, and I will be keeping an eye out for sales/combos before I order, but I am willing to buy in the $1000 - $1300 range for this thing. So, any comments/suggestions/criticisms for this build? Thanks.
XiaNaphryz said:Any particular reason you're not going Sandy Bridge for mobo/CPU?
brucewaynegretzky said:How future proof do you guys think most of your PCs are? How often do you have to buy a new rig? I'm thinking about getting a desktop for the first time in years in a few months, but I don't want to have to buy one again for a long time. I'd preferably like to get something where I know there will be a support line I can call when I have problems. I read the OP, but I still don't know what everything means in terms of longevity. I'll need it for work too, but that will be only word processing, so really it just needs to be stable. I'd also like to be able to get in on Steam deals.
NopeWAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
Smokey said:Nope
Not good enough for anything modern really.
WAWAZA said:Overclocked Intel® Core i7 990x Extreme Six Core Processor (4.0GHz, 12MB Cache)
12GB DDR3 1333MHz (3x 4GB) Tri Channel Memory
Dual 4GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon HD 6990
2TB RAID 0 (2x 1TB SATA-II, 7,200 RPM, 32MB Cache HDDs)
good for skyrim?
brucewaynegretzky said:How future proof do you guys think most of your PCs are? How often do you have to buy a new rig? I'm thinking about getting a desktop for the first time in years in a few months, but I don't want to have to buy one again for a long time. I'd preferably like to get something where I know there will be a support line I can call when I have problems. I read the OP, but I still don't know what everything means in terms of longevity. I'll need it for work too, but that will be only word processing, so really it just needs to be stable. I'd also like to be able to get in on Steam deals.
Ivy Bridge is supposedly going to be compatible with current Sandy Bridge sockets, we'll have to wait and see. As for the i5/i7 differences, main one is that the i5 quad has no HT whereas the i7 quad does, so the i7 will get you 8 threads. Something to be aware of if you plan on using multi-thread heavy apps.Pai Pai Master said:Not at all, I'm definitely willing to make changes based on any suggestions and further research. I'm not very familiar with the i3/i5/i7 lines right now and I still need to go in deep and look at some benchmarks/etc.
Is the 960 more of an enthusiast product meant for fancy Crossfire/SLI and overclocking? Sandy Bridge looks like it'd be a smarter buy for something that I'm looking for. I guess my main concern is the differences between the i5 and i7, which don't look that great when compared directly. A lot of these posts seem to be pointing towards the i5 as well, is that more of a budget thing or is there really that small of a benefit for gaming purposes in the i7 over the i5?
Will there be higher clock CPUs on the LGA 1155 platform in the future in case I go with the i5 and feel the desire for an upgrade a couple years down the line? Ivy Bridge will be a new socket type, won't it?
Thanks.
EDIT: Upon further research it appears socket 1366 is going to be replaced by 2011, and Sandy Bridge will be available in 1155 and 2011 forms? Is that correct? In that case Sandy Bridge is the obvious choice, thanks for the suggestion. Can anyone offer some advice on choosing between i5 and i7? If there's not a great benefit for me choosing i7, I think I'll go with the i5 and leave myself open for an upgrade down the line.
bill0527 said:It's difficult to answer this. How long is a long time to you? Are you getting a mid range rig to start with or going all out? I built a mid range rig 4 years ago. C2d 2.13 ghz, 2gb ram, gts 8600. I ran all the newest games on medium to high setting. 2 years later I had to add another 2gb ram and replaced the vid card with a radeon 4850 hd. 2 years after that and my CPU was completely out of date and won't run most of the latest games very well, if at all. So I did a complate new build last month. So in my experience, I got 4 years out of a midrange build with small incremental upgrades along the way.
XiaNaphryz said:Ivy Bridge is supposedly going to be compatible with current Sandy Bridge sockets, we'll have to wait and see. As for the i5/i7 differences, main one is that the i5 quad has no HT whereas the i7 quad does, so the i7 will get you 8 threads. Something to be aware of if you plan on using multi-thread heavy apps.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Hmm, that's something I didn't think of with my build. Any idea how hot or loud it might run?
You need sli. Its going to keep happening at that res with dx11 and extreme games.Appleman said:Just scored a 30" U3011 this weekend.
Crysis maxed at 2560x1600... :O
I just wish I got totally playable framerates on Crysis 2 DX11 at that res. It's not terrible.....
Oh I know lol.Saren is Bad said:He was responding to the guy above his post, not yours lol. But your build looks good, did you convince your wife to let you build? (I think you were asking about IBuyPower earlier)
If you really want to extend the life of it I'd go for a P8P67 motherboard with a 2500k. The 2500k is almost a no-brainer it's only 10$ more and will allow you to overclock down the road (and down the road you may want to get a CPU cooler). The motherboard P67 is just a better investment for I think 20$ more.Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Oh I know lol.
I'm going to try and convince her today to just let me get it, the building it myself option is pretty much dead. I just need to sell her on the system lasting for 3 or more years with only upgrades needed for graphics cards and maybe memory. I'm hoping the processor motherboard will last for awhile. Any idea on the shelf life of the build? Stuff like that will help convince her.
I don't expect more than a year of high graphics on the current system (though I suspect with video card upgrades that can be extended), but I'm hoping the base system will last for a couple of years. I think someone said earlier that processors aren't really going to be needed (barring PC only games) until the next gen of consoles.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Oh I know lol.
I'm going to try and convince her today to just let me get it, the building it myself option is pretty much dead. I just need to sell her on the system lasting for 3 or more years with only upgrades needed for graphics cards and maybe memory. I'm hoping the processor motherboard will last for awhile. Any idea on the shelf life of the build? Stuff like that will help convince her.
I don't expect more than a year of high graphics on the current system (though I suspect with video card upgrades that can be extended), but I'm hoping the base system will last for a couple of years. I think someone said earlier that processors aren't really going to be needed (barring PC only games) until the next gen of consoles.
brucewaynegretzky said:How future proof do you guys think most of your PCs are? How often do you have to buy a new rig? I'm thinking about getting a desktop for the first time in years in a few months, but I don't want to have to buy one again for a long time. I'd preferably like to get something where I know there will be a support line I can call when I have problems. I read the OP, but I still don't know what everything means in terms of longevity. I'll need it for work too, but that will be only word processing, so really it just needs to be stable. I'd also like to be able to get in on Steam deals.
gatti-man said:You need sli. Its going to keep happening at that res with dx11 and extreme games.
The price of being a high end userAppleman said:Ugh, I know. One GTX580 doesn't quite cut it, but I can't justify a motherboard upgrade to support SLi without doing a CPU/MOBO/RAM upgrade. Plus the cost of the second 580...
It's even worse when there is only a handful of titles that really make use of the hardware with DX11 still being really new.Smokey said:The price of being a high end user![]()
I got my x58 mobo a year ago for $99 from the evga refurb store. Its been rock solid for me and I oc. No Sata 3 thoughAppleman said:Ugh, I know. One GTX580 doesn't quite cut it, but I can't justify a motherboard upgrade to support SLi without doing a CPU/MOBO/RAM upgrade. Plus the cost of the second 580...
gatti-man said:I got my x58 mobo a year ago for $99 from the evga refurb store. Its been rock solid for me and I oc. No Sata 3 though![]()
Principe Nero said:Maybe on very low settings...
I use RealTemp. I don't think the Z programs even show temps.Deputy Moonman said:This may be a dumb question, but are CPU-Z and GPU-Z the programs of choice for monitoring CPU/GPU temperatures? I don't want to have to always go into the bios to check my temps.
brucewaynegretzky said:With all the high end games coming out in the next few months, Skyrim, ME3, etc., would it be smart to just wait for like 6 months? Also is there a clear preference for where to buy if I don't want something that will ship to my home ready to use? I don't really think I'm capable of putting a PC together myself, and I know my gf (think wife relationship before anyone jumps at me for needing to clear by my gf) will prefer I'm not involved in assembly if we're going to shell out the cash for a new comp.
EatChildren said:Thanks guys. I did a clean install of my display drivers, but ran into the blue screen again. Tinkered around in the BIOS and realised I had set my memory timings completely wrong. Only a notch up, but I dont recall why I would do this.
I've scaled them back to stock and I'll see how stability goes now. If it blue screens again I have no idea what could be causing the problem.