It's possible I put the wrong one in the cart, but as you it worked out and the advice you've given was golden, so I don't mean be ungrateful.LordCanti said:I guess me and Microcenter are going to have to agree to disagree on the issue of that PSU. It wouldn't have been my first choice, but the budget was so tight, and there weren't a whole lot of options around that price. Either way, as long as that PSU is functioning, it isn't an issue. I'm glad it worked out.
LordCanti said:Your CPU fan isn't spinning? That is a big problem (or did I misunderstand the issue you were having?)
It's funny when I did my external tests (after fixing the pushed in problem) it did, but when I did some boot tests in the case. I didn't notice it spinning. It would be odd for the fan to have an error getting put in the case.
Granted if the fan isn't working or I goofed it, from a return perspective, it's nowhere like fucking up the processor. The weird think is it did spin, but like I said initially it barely spun and then stopped till I fully locked it in.
Perhaps the fan plug came out when I put it in the unit. Man I just want to go home and work on it now lol.
Okay that's what I was thinking it was.LordCanti said:The other fans seem to be regular molex fans (not controlled by the mobo). Just plug them into the PSU, and you should be good to go there.
In fairness to my wife, the fire hazard meme is more my own lol. I appreciate the advice I'll try doing that when I get home. I'll make sure the fan rule is follow. I only have one thing near a fan anyway.LordCanti said:As for cable management, basically you'll want to route everything behind the motherboard. There are holes cutout specifically for this purpose, so you should use them. Even if the cables don't need to go very far (like for PCI-E power), run the cable behind the mobo anyway, and have it come up and snap into place. That should take care of most of that wire mess. Don't worry about getting it too tidy, because it really isn't a fire hazard, despite your wife's misgivings (just make sure no wires are touching a fan). Your temperatures shouldn't be horribly hindered either.
I suspect I didn't think of going behind the Motherboard (as I didn't notice any openings) was because the case is still open. I didn't realize I'd have that room to work with. as 4:00 AM rolled around my mind was starting to lose some of it's higher functions lol.
Oh I can't wait to push Civ 5, DAO,and World in Conflict up to 11 (direct x and settings wise!)It's time to load up some games!
I really want to get The Witcher or some crazy recent game, but skipping on the steam sale (I was moving and without internet and knowledge of the system I was getting) makes buying anything know feel like the act of a chump.
gatti-man said:Yeah I used to have an msi board and it would always beep at boot like 3 times lol.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:It's possible I put the wrong one in the cart, but as you it worked out and the advice you've given was golden, so I don't mean be ungrateful.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:It's funny when I did my external tests (after fixing the pushed in problem) it did, but when I did some boot tests in the case. I didn't notice it spinning. It would be odd for the fan to have an error getting put in the case.
Granted if the fan isn't working or I goofed it, from a return perspective, it's nowhere like fucking up the processor. The weird think is it did spin, but like I said initially it barely spun and then stopped till I fully locked it in.
Perhaps the fan plug came out when I put it in the unit. Man I just want to go home and work on it now lol.
LordCanti said:With any luck, your CPU fan just isn't properly plugged in, or you've plugged it into the wrong header on the motherboard (It should have been CPU_FAN or something of that sort).
If it is properly plugged in, you may need a replacement. The CPU fan is essential. I wouldn't use the computer until you've verified that the CPU fan is properly functioning. Hell, I'm surprised it booted without giving you an error message.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Yeah, nothing else really makes any sense for why it would suddenly stop working. I just wish I could look at it right now, well besides the pictures. lol
I kind of wish I hadn't done about 5 boot tests at times when the fan didn't work during the external build. Granted those were really short. I just hope it doesn't have any long term negative effects.
Would the fan not being locked in place be a reason for it not spinning during those initial external tests? If not, then I guess it might have been the plug.
LordCanti said:No, locked into place or not, if it was getting power from the mobo, it should have spun.
You won't burn your CPU cold booting it into Windows. You'd need to play an intensive game (or run Prime 95, or a benchmarking app, etc) to cause any harm, and even then, it should notice it has gotten too hot and slow itself (if not completely turn the computer off to keep from being damaged).
All the time.InfiniteNine said:How often is that capable build updated? Going to jump in and finally build my first PC in a few weeks and I'm just curious.![]()
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:That's funny because at first, before I locked it into place it started to spin for a second and then stopped. It barley started even like one or two revolutions.
Good to know I haven't made the situation worse or anything (that can't be fixed by a replacement fan), but man I don't want to have to drive back to try and exchange just the fan tonight...but I sure as hell don't want to wait even longer to use it. Hopefully it's just the plug was loose. Well luckily the worst it could be is crappy fan go get new one...unless the socket on the mobo is screwed up...uh I don't even want to think about that possibility. That said I would think that's unlikely since before I put it in the case it was eventually spinning fine, right?
I suppose I should just look over to see which keyboards and mice are comfortable when I purchase everything then. If the list is evolving often then I'll want to have some things I'm set on buying at least. Thanks for the reply!mkenyon said:All the time.
LordCanti said:I'm kind of wondering why you didn't lock the heatsink into place before you turned it on the first time out of the case. Not having a fan spinning is one thing, but not having a properly seated heatsink is a big mistake (unless contact was maintained with the bottom at all times, I guess).
I'll try that out if plugging in again doesn't work. I really hope it's not a CPU_FAN header issue.LordCanti said:If the fan is properly plugged into the mobo, the next step is to go into the BIOS and make sure some setting hasn't gotten flipped. Next up is checking another fan header on the board to see if the fan spins from that (which would point to a CPU_FAN header issue)
No, I haven't hooked up the HD and CD/DVD drive yet. That's next up after the fan is checked out.LordCanti said:Did you install Windows yet? Does the fan spin up in Windows?
Ughh, I hope that's not the case. Still good to know nothing is most likely physically FUBARed.LordCanti said:If worse comes to worse, and you do need a replacement, I'm not sure if they can give you just the fan. They'd probably give you an entirely new heatsink, which would mean you'd need to clean the thermal paste off the CPU. Hopefully it won't come to that. Physically, I doubt you'll have damaged anything.
Razer Blackwidow + Steelseries Xai if you're not looking to drop a ton. Filco keyboard otherwise.InfiniteNine said:I suppose I should just look over to see which keyboards and mice are comfortable when I purchase everything then. If the list is evolving often then I'll want to have some things I'm set on buying at least. Thanks for the reply!
Download the drivers from Nvidia's website, double click the .exe, rather than having windows do it.Pandoracell said:I wanted to update my graphics card drivers, so I uninstalled the old driver and when I go install the new one it tells me the installer could not find compatible hardware. What's the solution?
Trying to install latest stable Nvidia drivers for a GTX 460.
mkenyon said:Grab a different case than the Antec 300, it's rubbish IMO. HAF 912 is a much better option in the same price category.
mkenyon said:Download the drivers from Nvidia's website, double click the .exe, rather than having windows do it.
chewydogg said:Why do you say its rubbish? Turns out that one of the parts I've already ordered. Ha!
Build quality with Antec is really questionable, maybe its just QA. I used to get their cases almost all the time as that's what my LCS (local computer shop) carried, and every single one falls apart after a single build. The only case of theirs I haven't had a problem with is a P180 that I put my business server in, which hasn't been touched since it was built 4 years ago. They're kind of similar to IKEA furniture. Good price, nice finish, looks purdy, but falls apart fairly quickly. Too much plastic, too many cases shipped to really stay on top of good QA.chewydogg said:Why do you say its rubbish? Turns out that one of the parts I've already ordered. Ha!
chewydogg said:First, a big THANK YOU to all of the helpful posts in this thread. Especially Hazaro.
So after 7 years, its time for a new PC. I'll be upgrading from a Pentium 4 2.8 ghz with a Radeon x300 series gpu, so I'm pretty excited to see how games will look. My budget is about $800. I'm not going to be OCing and I'll be using my current monitor (1600 x 900) for now. Probably upgrade that around Christmas.
This is what I came up with:
Antec 300 case
ASRock H67M (B3)
EVGA GeForce GTX 460 1gb
Corsair 650W PSU
i5 2500 Sandy Bridge CPU
G.Skill Ripjaw X Series 8gb (2 x 4gb)
Samsung Spinpoint F3 1tb HDD
Asus 24x DVD Burner
Add Win 7 to that and its just under $850, which is just fine.
I can only order a few parts at a time, the wait sucks. I'm so anxious...
It would be more than $10 as he would need to upgrade the H67 to a P67 as well.tehbible said:why not just pay the extra $10 and get the i5-2500k? sandy bridge chips are much easier to OC than its predecessors. It would only increase the shelf life of your rig. I would definitely go that route so you can get a few extra years out of your computer.
btw, one could still overclock their cpu with Intel's stock cooler.
mkenyon said:With every case that Antec sells, there's a similar product from a different company (CM, Fractal, Lian Li, Silverstone, NZXT) that are much nicer.
chewydogg said:Right. Not going to OC with this PC. Maybe next build...
Who needs to wait for the future. Currently, there are games that take advantage of the increase speed from overclocking, ie Witcher 2.Appleman said:That's a tad shortsighted, in 2 or 3 years OCing will be able to really extend the life of your CPU/MOBO which could prevent you from having to upgrade prematurely.
Food for thought...
knitoe said:Who needs to wait for the future. Currently, there are games that take advantage of the increase speed from overclocking, ie Witcher 2.
Appleman said:Absolutely. But if someone was uncomfortable with overclocking, and it's not worth the "risk" at this point, their minds could be changed a couple generations down the road when <4GHz just wont cut it.
I go to LANs, which may have something to do with it. My computer is moved from place to place about every other month. I also open up my cases fairly regularly doing constant upgrades. I think I probably tend to push cases to their limits, and end up seeing faults that might pass others by. I get what you're saying though, lots of people can get by with the Antec cases because they sit in one spot and are only opened a few times a year. I guess it'll do for that job, but I just can't personally recommend something I see as inferior build quality.Shambles said:If you're destroying cases by inserting components into them you're doing it wrong. The 300 is rock solid. The only issue they have is the tabs on the front dust panel can have issues. At this point i'd have a hard time recommending any case without USB 3.0 front panels, neither of which the 300 or HAF 912 have.
Reminds me of trying to fit the cheap ass port shield/listing on the back of my PC. It's insanely hard and so crappy that if it wasn't for dust protection I might give up!Shambles said:If you're destroying cases by inserting components into them you're doing it wrong. The 300 is rock solid. The only issue they have is the tabs on the front dust panel can have issues. At this point i'd have a hard time recommending any case without USB 3.0 front panels, neither of which the 300 or HAF 912 have.
Infi-kun can't read the OP.InfiniteNine said:How often is that capable build updated? Going to jump in and finally build my first PC in a few weeks and I'm just curious.![]()
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Oh I was wondering how high has the i5 2500K been overclocked too and same for the EVGA GTX460?
I have to admit I am tempted to try it once i have everything setup, but I just want to know how much gains I can expect.
I have to admit I'd love to run Battlefield 3 at high levels.
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:Oh I was wondering how high has the i5 2500K been overclocked too and same for the EVGA GTX460?
I have to admit I am tempted to try it once i have everything setup, but I just want to know how much gains I can expect.
I have to admit I'd love to run Battlefield 3 at high levels.
Petrie said:Looking for a bit of advice. I've never really bothered with anything but some cheap logitech speakers for sound on my PC, but I'm playing a lot more PC games these days and would like to invest in some decent sound. Anyways, could I get some advice or recommendations? Thanks!
Petrie said:Looking for a bit of advice. I've never really bothered with anything but some cheap logitech speakers for sound on my PC, but I'm playing a lot more PC games these days and would like to invest in some decent sound. Nothing extreme as I have roommates and they don't want huge bass across the hallway, I've considered a headphone/headset combo for ease in online gaming, but I don't always want to wear a headset you know? Anyways, could I get some advice or recommendations? Thanks!
Eltacoman said:I'm pretty sure some 2500k's have been able to get up to 5.7GHz. Not all of them can do it, and it's pretty rough on it as well.
scogoth said:On air, water, piezoelectric, or nitrogen. With LNO2 someone hit 6GHz
Zapages said:After discussing things with my Father. We are a bit tight on money right now.
So instead of buying a new computer, we are thinking of just upgrading the ram and getting a new hard drive and maybe a new graphics card:
My current board is this Intel D865Perl: http://www.intel.com/support/motherboards/desktop/D865PERL/sb/CS-027106.htm
What type of ram do you guys recommend for this motherboard? I don't want to buy RAM that will not work on it.
I will have 32bit Windows 7 running it. So up to 3 GB will be nice or could I get 2 GB and allow my current 512 of ram to still be there?
My current RAM sticker and logo says: BRAVO 512 MB DDR DIMM,N 64WPO PO17296
I would prefer buying it from amazon.com
Also will it support this hard drive: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000VRZ7PA/?tag=neogaf0e-20
Will this graphics card be good: Axle3D Nvidia GeForce 7950 GT 512MB DDR3 256-Bit HDTV / S-Video AGP 8x Video Card w/Dual Link DVI: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002Q62VYO/?tag=neogaf0e-20
upgrade from my current Geforce 7600GT 256 MB DDR3. My current power supply is only 350W though. Will that still be ok for this one or should not upgrade the graphics card as its not worth it now?
The computer is used for minimum gaming (mostly old school stuff ie. Xbox/PS2 generation of PC games(Ys/PoP SoT/WW/T2T/PoP 1/2:Shadow and the Flame/3D), and some trackmania on the side)
If I upgrade: The specs will be:
Pentium 4 2.6c Ghz
2 GB of RAM or 2.5 GB of RAM
320 GB Hard Drive
Geforce 7950GT 512 MB